Compositions and methods of diagnosing, monitoring, staging, imaging and treating prostate cancer

ABSTRACT

The present invention provides polynucleotides and polypeptides which are diagnostic markers for prostate cancer. In addition, antibodies immunospecific for these markers are provided. Vectors, hosts cells and methods for producing these markers, as well as methods and tools for using these markers in detecting, diagnosing, monitoring, staging, prognosticating, imaging and treating prostate cancer are also provided.

INTRODUCTION

[0001] This application claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/191,511, filed Mar. 23, 2000.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

[0002] This invention relates, in part, to newly identified polynucleotides and polypeptides encoded thereby, as well as methods for producing and using these polynucleotides and polypeptides. Antibodies which are immunospecific for these polypeptides are also described. Expression of the newly identified polynucleotides and levels of the polypeptides encoded thereby are upregulated in or specific to prostate cancer tissue. Thus, these new polynucleotides and polypeptides, referred to herein as Prostate Cancer Specific Genes or PSGs are useful in assays for detecting, diagnosing, monitoring, staging, prognosticating, imaging and treating cancers, particularly prostate cancer.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0003] Cancer of the prostate is the most prevalent malignancy in adult males, excluding skin cancer, and is an increasingly prevalent health problem in the United States. In 1996, it was estimated that 41,400 deaths would result from this disease in the United States alone, indicating that prostate cancer is second only to lung cancer as the most common cause of death in the same population. If diagnosed and treated early, when the cancer is still confined to the prostate, the chances of cure is significantly higher.

[0004] Treatment decisions for an individual are linked to the stage of prostate cancer present in that individual. A common classification of the spread of prostate cancer was developed by the American Urological Association (AUA). The AUA system divides prostate tumors into four stages, A to D. Stage A, microscopic cancer within prostate, is further subdivided into stages A1 and A2. Sub-stage A1 is a well-differentiated cancer confined to one site within the prostate. Treatment is generally observation, radical prostatectomy, or radiation. Sub-stage A2 is a moderately to poorly differentiated cancer at multiple sites within the prostate. Treatment is radical prostatectomy or radiation. Stage B, palpable lump within the prostate, is also further subdivided into sub-stages B1 and B2. In sub-stage B1, the cancer forms a small nodule in one lobe of the prostate. In sub-stage B2, the cancer forms large or multiple nodules, or occurs in both lobes of the prostate. Treatment for sub-stages B1 and B2 is either radical prostatectomy or radiation. Stage C is a large cancer mass involving most or all of the prostate and is also further subdivided into two sub-stages. In sub-stage C1, the cancer forms a continuous mass that may have extended beyond the prostate. In sub-stage C2, the cancer forms a continuous mass that invades the surrounding tissue. Treatment for both these sub-stages is radiation with or without drugs to address the cancer. The fourth stage, Stage D is metastatic cancer and is also subdivided into two sub-stages. In sub-stage D1, the cancer appears in the lymph nodes of the pelvis. In sub-stage D2, the cancer involves tissues beyond lymph nodes. Treatment for both of these sub-stages is systemic drugs to address the cancer as well as pain.

[0005] However, current prostate cancer staging methods are limited. As many as 50% of prostate cancers initially staged as A2, B, or C are actually stage D, metastatic. Discovery of metastasis is significant because patients with metastatic cancers have a poorer prognosis and require significantly different therapy than those with localized cancers. The five year survival rates for patients with localized and metastatic prostate cancers are 93% and 29%, respectively. Accordingly, procedures used for detecting, diagnosing, monitoring, staging, and prognosticating prostate cancer are of critical importance to the outcome of the patient.

[0006] Cancer patients are closely monitored following initial therapy and during adjuvant therapy to determine response to therapy and to detect persistent or recurrent disease or metastasis. There is clearly a need for cancer markers which are more sensitive and specific in detecting cancer recurrence.

[0007] Another important step in managing cancer is to determine the stage of the patient's disease. Stage determination has potential prognostic value and provides criteria for designing optimal therapy. Generally, pathological staging of cancer is preferable over clinical staging because the former gives a more accurate prognosis. However, clinical staging would be preferred were it at least as accurate as pathological staging because it does not depend on an invasive procedure to obtain tissue for pathological evaluation. Staging of cancer would be improved by detecting new markers in cells, tissues or bodily fluids which could differentiate between different stages of invasion.

[0008] The present invention relates to newly identified polynucleotides and polypeptides encoded thereby which are referred to herein as Prostate Cancer Specific Genes or PSGs, as well as antibodies which are immunospecific for the polypeptides. The present invention also relates to methods for use of these PSGs in detecting, diagnosing, monitoring, staging, prognosticating, imaging and treating prostate cancer. For purposes of the present invention, PSG refers, among other things, to native protein expressed by the gene comprising a polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25. By “PSG” it is also meant herein polynucleotides which, due to degeneracy in genetic coding, comprise variations in nucleotide sequence as compared to SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, but which still encode the same protein. In the alternative, what is meant by PSG as used herein, means the native mRNA encoded by the gene comprising the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, or a polynucleotide which is capable of hybridizing under stringent conditions to the antisense sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25.

[0009] Other objects, features, advantages and aspects of the present invention will become apparent to those of skill in the art from the following description. It should be understood, however, that the following description and the specific examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention are given by way of illustration only. Various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the disclosed invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from reading the following description and from reading the other parts of the present disclosure.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0010] Toward these ends, and others, it is an object of the present invention to provide isolated polynucleotide sequences comprising SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25; fragments or portions of such sequences which contain at least 15 contiguous nucleobases of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25; nucleic acid sequences which, due to degeneracy in genetic coding, comprise variations in polynucleotide sequence as compared to SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, but which still encode the same protein; and nucleic acid sequences which are capable of hybridizing under stringent conditions to the antisense sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25. The present invention further relates to isolated polypeptides encoded by the above-described polynucleotides. These polynucleotides and/or the polypeptides encoded thereby are referred to generally herein as Prostate Cancer Specific Genes or PSGs.

[0011] It is another object of the present invention to provide vectors containing the PSG polynucleotides and host cells for expression and recovery of the PSG polypeptides encoded thereby.

[0012] It is another object of the present invention to provide antibodies which are immunospecific for PSG polypeptides.

[0013] It is another object of the present invention to provide tools for detection of PSGs. Such tools include, but are not limited to, antisense oligonucleotides which specifically hybridize with the PSGs and antibodies which are immunospecific for the PSGs.

[0014] It is another object of the present invention to provide a method for diagnosing the presence of prostate cancer by analyzing for changes in levels of PSG in cells, tissues or bodily fluids compared with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues, or bodily fluid type of a normal human control, wherein a change in levels of PSG in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with prostate cancer.

[0015] Further provided is a method of diagnosing metastatic cancer in a patient having prostate cancer which is not known to have metastasized by identifying a human patient suspected of having prostate cancer that has metastasized; analyzing a sample of cells, tissues, or bodily fluid from such patient for PSG; comparing the PSG levels in such cells, tissues, or bodily fluid with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues, or bodily fluid type of a normal human control, wherein an increase in PSG levels in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with prostate cancer which has metastasized.

[0016] Also provided by the invention is a method of staging prostate cancer in a human which has such cancer by identifying a human patient having such cancer; analyzing a sample of cells, tissues, or bodily fluid from such patient for PSG; comparing PSG levels in such cells, tissues, or bodily fluid with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues, or bodily fluid type of a normal human control sample, wherein an increase in PSG levels in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which is progressing and a decrease in the levels of PSG is associated with a cancer which is regressing or in remission.

[0017] Further provided is a method of monitoring prostate cancer in a human having such cancer for the onset of metastasis. The method comprises identifying a human patient having such cancer that is not known to have metastasized; periodically analyzing a sample of cells, tissues, or bodily fluid from such patient for PSG; comparing the PSG levels in such cells, tissue, or bodily fluid with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues, or bodily fluid type of a normal human control sample, wherein an increase in PSG levels in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which has metastasized.

[0018] Further provided is a method of monitoring the change in stage of prostate cancer in a human having such cancer by looking at levels of PSG in a human having such cancer. The method comprises identifying a human patient having such cancer; periodically analyzing a sample of cells, tissues, or bodily fluid from such patient for PSG; comparing the PSG levels in such cells, tissue, or bodily fluid with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues, or bodily fluid type of a normal human control sample, wherein an increase in PSG levels in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which is progressing and a decrease in the levels of PSG is associated with a cancer which is regressing or in remission.

[0019] Further provided are new therapeutic agents and methods of identifying and/or designing new therapeutic agents targeted to PSGs for use in imaging and treating disease relating to PSGs such as prostate cancer. For example, in one embodiment, therapeutic agents such as antibodies targeted against PSG or fragments of such antibodies can be used to detect or image localization of PSG in a patient for the purpose of detecting or diagnosing a disease or condition. Such antibodies can be polyclonal, monoclonal, or omniclonal or prepared by molecular biology techniques. The term “antibody”, as used herein and throughout the instant specification, is also meant to include aptamers and single-stranded oligonucleotides such as those derived from an in vitro evolution protocol referred to as SELEX and well known to those skilled in the art. Antibodies can be labeled with a variety of detectable labels including, but not limited to, radioisotopes and paramagnetic metals. Therapeutic agents such as small molecules or antibodies or fragments thereof which decrease the concentration and/or activity of PSGs can also be used in the treatment of diseases characterized by expression of a PSG. Therapeutic agents of the present invention also include agonists and antagonists of PSG polypeptides and vaccines capable of inducing an immune response against PSG polypeptides. Such agents can be readily identified in accordance with the teachings herein.

[0020] Other objects, features, advantages and aspects of the present invention will become apparent to those of skill in the art from the following description. It should be understood, however, that the following description and the specific examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention, are given by way of illustration only. Various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the disclosed invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from reading the following description and from reading the other parts of the present disclosure.

GLOSSARY

[0021] The following illustrative explanations are provided to facilitate understanding of certain terms used frequently herein. The explanations are provided as a convenience and are not limitative of the invention.

[0022] DIGESTION of DNA refers to catalytic cleavage of the DNA with a restriction enzyme that acts only at certain sequences in the DNA. The various restriction enzymes referred to herein are commercially available and their reaction conditions, cofactors and other requirements for use are known and routine to the skilled artisan.

[0023] For analytical purposes, typically, 1 μg of plasmid or DNA fragment is digested with about 2 units of enzyme in about 20 μl of reaction buffer. For the purpose of isolating DNA fragments for plasmid construction, typically 5 to 50 μg of DNA are digested with 20 to 250 units of enzyme in proportionately larger volumes.

[0024] Appropriate buffers and substrate amounts for particular restriction enzymes are described in standard laboratory manuals, such as those referenced below, and they are specified by commercial suppliers.

[0025] Incubation times of about 1 hour at 37° C. are ordinarily used, but conditions may vary in accordance with standard procedures, the supplier's instructions and the particulars of the reaction. After digestion, reactions may be analyzed, and fragments may be purified by electrophoresis through an agarose or polyacrylamide gel, using well known methods that are routine for those skilled in the art.

[0026] GENETIC ELEMENT generally means a polynucleotide comprising a region that encodes a polypeptide or a region that regulates transcription or translation or other processes important to expression of the polypeptide in a host cell, or a polynucleotide comprising both a region that encodes a polypeptide and a region operably linked thereto that regulates expression.

[0027] Genetic elements may be comprised within a vector that replicates as an episomal element; that is, as a molecule physically independent of the host cell genome. They may be comprised within mini-chromosomes, such as those that arise during amplification of transfected DNA by methotrexate selection in eukaryotic cells. Genetic elements also may be comprised within a host cell genome; not in their natural state but, rather, following manipulation such as isolation, cloning and introduction into a host cell in the form of purified DNA or in a vector, among others.

[0028] ISOLATED means altered “by the hand of man” from its natural state; i.e., that, if it occurs in nature, it has been changed or removed from its original environment, or both.

[0029] For example, a naturally occurring polynucleotide or a polypeptide naturally present in a living animal in its natural state is not “isolated,” but the same polynucleotide or polypeptide separated from the coexisting materials of its natural state is “isolated”, as the term is employed herein. For example, with respect to polynucleotides, the term isolated means that it is separated from the chromosome and cell in which it naturally occurs.

[0030] As part of or following isolation, such polynucleotides can be joined to other polynucleotides, such as DNAs, for mutagenesis, to form fusion proteins, and for propagation or expression in a host, for instance. The isolated polynucleotides, alone or joined to other polynucleotides such as vectors, can be introduced into host cells, in culture or in whole organisms. When introduced into host cells in culture or in whole organisms, such DNAs still would be isolated, as the term is used herein, because they would not be in their naturally occurring form or environment. Similarly, the polynucleotides and polypeptides may occur in a composition, such as media formulations, solutions for introduction of polynucleotides or polypeptides, for example, into cells, compositions or solutions for chemical or enzymatic reactions, for instance, which are not naturally occurring compositions, and, therein remain isolated polynucleotides or polypeptides within the meaning of that term as it is employed herein.

[0031] LIGATION refers to the process of forming phosphodiester bonds between two or more polynucleotides, which most often are double stranded DNAs. Techniques for ligation are well known to the art and protocols for ligation are described in standard laboratory manuals and references, such as, for instance, Sambrook et al., MOLECULAR CLONING, A LABORATORY MANUAL, 2nd Ed.; Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. (1989) and Maniatis et al., pg. 146, as cited below.

[0032] OLIGONUCLEOTIDE(S) refers to relatively short polynucleotides. Often the term refers to single-stranded deoxyribonucleotides, but it can refer as well to single- or double-stranded ribonucleotides, RNA:DNA hybrids and double-stranded DNAS, among others.

[0033] Oligonucleotides, such as single-stranded DNA probe oligonucleotides, often are synthesized by chemical methods, such as those implemented on automated oligonucleotide synthesizers. However, oligonucleotides can be made by a variety of other methods, including in vitro recombinant DNA-mediated techniques and by expression of DNAs in cells and organisms.

[0034] Initially, chemically synthesized DNAs typically are obtained without a 5′ phosphate. The 5′ ends of such oligonucleotides are not substrates for phosphodiester bond formation by ligation reactions that employ DNA ligases typically used to form recombinant DNA molecules. Where ligation of such oligonucleotides is desired, a phosphate can be added by standard techniques, such as those that employ a kinase and ATP.

[0035] The 3′ end of a chemically synthesized oligonucleotide generally has a free hydroxyl group and, in the presence of a ligase, such as T4 DNA ligase, readily will form a phosphodiester bond with a 5′ phosphate of another polynucleotide, such as another oligonucleotide. As is well known, this reaction can be prevented selectively, where desired, by removing the 5′ phosphates of the other polynucleotide(s) prior to ligation.

[0036] PLASMIDS generally are designated herein by a lower case “p” preceded and/or followed by capital letters and/or numbers, in accordance with standard naming conventions that are familiar to those of skill in the art. Starting plasmids disclosed herein are either commercially available, publicly available on an unrestricted basis, or can be constructed from available plasmids by routine application of well known, published procedures. Many plasmids and other cloning and expression vectors that can be used in accordance with the present invention are well known and readily available to those of skill in the art. Moreover, those of skill readily may construct any number of other plasmids suitable for use in the invention. The properties, construction and use of such plasmids, as well as other vectors, in the present invention will be readily apparent to those of skill from the present disclosure.

[0037] POLYNUCLEOTIDE(S) generally refers to any polyribonucleotide or polydeoxribonucleotide, which may be unmodified RNA or DNA or modified RNA or DNA. Thus, for instance, polynucleotides as used herein refers to, among others, single- and double-stranded DNA, DNA that is a mixture of single-and double-stranded regions, single- and double-stranded RNA, and RNA that is mixture of single- and double-stranded regions, hybrid molecules comprising DNA and RNA that may be single-stranded or, more typically, double-stranded or a mixture of single- and double-stranded regions. In addition, polynucleotide as used herein refers to triple-stranded regions comprising RNA or DNA or both RNA and DNA. The strands in such regions may be from the same molecule or from different molecules. The regions may include all of one or more of the molecules, but more typically involve only a region of some of the molecules. One of the molecules of a triple-helical region often is an oligonucleotide.

[0038] As used herein, the term polynucleotide includes DNAs or RNAs as described above that contain one or more modified bases. Thus, DNAs or RNAs with backbones modified for stability or for other reasons are “polynucleotides” as that term is intended herein. Moreover, DNAs or RNAs comprising unusual bases, such as inosine, or modified bases, such as tritylated bases, to name just two examples, are polynucleotides as the term is used herein.

[0039] It will be appreciated that a great variety of modifications have been made to DNA and RNA that serve many useful purposes known to those of skill in the art. The term polynucleotide as it is employed herein embraces such chemically, enzymatically or metabolically modified forms of polynucleotides, as well as the chemical forms of DNA and RNA characteristic of viruses and cells, including simple and complex cells, inter alia.

[0040] POLYPEPTIDES, as used herein, includes all polypeptides as described below. The basic structure of polypeptides is well known and has been described in innumerable textbooks and other publications in the art. In this context, the term is used herein to refer to any peptide or protein comprising two or more amino acids joined to each other in a linear chain by peptide bonds. As used herein, the term refers to both short chains, which also commonly are referred to in the art as peptides, oligopeptides and oligomers, for example, and to longer chains, which generally are referred to in the art as proteins, of which there are many types. It will be appreciated that polypeptides often contain amino acids other than the 20 amino acids commonly referred to as the 20 naturally occurring amino acids, and that many amino acids, including the terminal amino acids, may be modified in a given polypeptide, either by natural processes, such as processing and other post-translational modifications, or by chemical modification techniques which are well known to the art. Even the common modifications that occur naturally in polypeptides are too numerous to list exhaustively here, but they are well described in basic texts and in more detailed monographs, as well as in voluminous research literature, and they are well known to those of skill in the art.

[0041] Known modifications which may be present in polypeptides of the present invention include, to name an illustrative few, acetylation, acylation, ADP-ribosylation, amidation, covalent attachment of flavin, covalent attachment of a heme moiety, covalent attachment of a nucleotide or nucleotide derivative, covalent attachment of a lipid or lipid derivative, covalent attachment of phosphotidylinositol, cross-linking, cyclization, disulfide bond formation, demethylation, formation of covalent cross-links, formation of cystine, formation of pyroglutamate, formylation, gamma-carboxylation, glycosylation, GPI anchor formation, hydroxylation, iodination, methylation, myristoylation, oxidation, proteolytic processing, phosphorylation, prenylation, racemization, selenoylation, sulfation, transfer-RNA mediated addition of amino acids to proteins such as arginylation, and ubiquitination.

[0042] Such modifications are well known to those of skill and have been described in great detail in the scientific literature. Several particularly common modifications, glycosylation, lipid attachment, sulfation, gamma-carboxylation of glutamic acid residues, hydroxylation and ADP-ribosylation, for instance, are described in most basic texts, such as, for instance PROTEINS STRUCTURE AND MOLECULAR PROPERTIES, 2nd Ed., T. E. Creighton, W. H. Freeman and Company, New York (1993). Many detailed reviews are available on this subject, such as, for example, those provided by Wold, F., Posttranslational Protein Modifications: Perspectives and Prospects, pgs. 1-12 in POSTTRANSLATIONAL COVALENT MODIFICATION OF PROTEINS, B. C. Johnson, Ed., Academic Press, New York (1983); Seifter et al., Analysis for protein modifications and nonprotein cofactors, Meth. Enzymol. 182: 626-646 (1990) and Rattan et al., Protein Synthesis: Posttranslational Modifications and Aging, Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 663: 48-62 (1992).

[0043] It will be appreciated, as is well known and as noted above, that polypeptides are not always entirely linear. For instance, polypeptides may be branched as a result of ubiquitination, and they may be circular, with or without branching, generally as a result of posttranslation events, including natural processing events and events brought about by human manipulation which do not occur naturally. Circular, branched and branched circular polypeptides may be synthesized by non-translation natural process and by entirely synthetic methods, as well.

[0044] Modifications can occur anywhere in a polypeptide, including the peptide backbone, the amino acid side-chains and the amino or carboxyl termini. In fact, blockage of the amino or carboxyl group in a polypeptide, or both, by a covalent modification, is common in naturally occurring and synthetic polypeptides and such modifications may be present in polypeptides of the present invention, as well. For instance, the amino terminal residue of polypeptides made in E. coli, prior to proteolytic processing, almost invariably will be N-formylmethionine.

[0045] The modifications that occur in a polypeptide often will be a function of how it is made. For polypeptides made by expressing a cloned gene in a host, for instance, the nature and extent of the modifications in large part will be determined by the host cell posttranslational modification capacity and the modification signals present in the polypeptide amino acid sequence. For instance, as is well known, glycosylation often does not occur in bacterial hosts such as E. coli. Accordingly, when glycosylation is desired, a polypeptide should be expressed in a glycosylating host, generally a eukaryotic cell. Insect cells often carry out the same posttranslational glycosylations as mammalian cells and, for this reason, insect cell expression systems have been developed to express efficiently mammalian proteins having native patterns of glycosylation, inter alia. Similar considerations apply to other modifications.

[0046] It will be appreciated that the same type of modification may be present in the same or varying degree at several sites in a given polypeptide. Also, a given polypeptide may contain many types of modifications.

[0047] In general, as used herein, the term polypeptide encompasses all such modifications, particularly those that are present in polypeptides synthesized by expressing a polynucleotide in a host cell.

[0048] VARIANT(S) of polynucleotides or polypeptides, as the term is used herein, are polynucleotides or polypeptides that differ from a reference polynucleotide or polypeptide, respectively. Variants in this sense are described below and elsewhere in the present disclosure in greater detail.

[0049] A variant may comprise a polynucleotide that differs in nucleotide sequence from another, reference polynucleotide. Generally, differences are limited so that the nucleotide sequences of the reference and the variant are closely similar overall and, in many regions, identical.

[0050] As noted below, changes in the nucleotide sequence of the variant may be silent. That is, they may not alter the amino acids encoded by the polynucleotide. Where alterations are limited to silent changes of this type a variant will encode a polypeptide with the same amino acid sequence as the reference. Also as noted below, changes in the nucleotide sequence of the variant may alter the amino acid sequence of a polypeptide encoded by the reference polynucleotide. Such nucleotide changes may result in amino acid substitutions, additions, deletions, fusions and truncations in the polypeptide encoded by the reference sequence, as discussed below.

[0051] A variant may also comprise a polypeptide that differs in amino acid sequence from another, reference polypeptide. Generally, differences are limited so that the sequences of the reference and the variant are closely similar overall and, in many region, identical.

[0052] A variant and reference polypeptide may differ in amino acid sequence by one or more substitutions, additions, deletions, fusions and truncations, which may be present in any combination.

[0053] RECEPTOR MOLECULE, as used herein, refers to molecules which bind or interact specifically with GSG polypeptides of the present invention and is inclusive not only of classic receptors, which are preferred, but also other molecules that specifically bind to or interact with polypeptides of the invention (which also may be referred to as “binding molecules” and “interaction molecules,” respectively and as “PSG binding or interaction molecules”. Binding between polypeptides of the invention and such molecules, including receptor or binding or interaction molecules may be exclusive to polypeptides of the invention, which is very highly preferred, or it may be highly specific for polypeptides of the invention, which is highly preferred, or it may be highly specific to a group of proteins that includes polypeptides of the invention, which is preferred, or it may be specific to several groups of proteins at least one of which includes polypeptides of the invention.

[0054] Receptors also may be non-naturally occurring, such as antibodies and antibody-derived reagents that bind to polypeptides of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION Polynucleotides and Polypeptides

[0055] The present invention relates to newly identified isolated polynucleotides and polypeptides encoded thereby which are upregulated in or specific to prostate cancer tissue. These polynucleotides and the polypeptides encoded thereby are believed to be useful as diagnostic markers for cancer, and in particular prostate cancer.

[0056] For purposes of the present invention, by polynucleotides it is meant to include isolated nucleic acid sequences comprising single- and double-stranded DNA, DNA that is a mixture of single- and double-stranded regions, single and double-stranded RNA or hybrids thereof wherein the sequences comprise SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, fragments of at least 15 contiguous nucleobases of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, or nucleic acid sequences which, due to degeneracy in genetic coding, comprise variations in polynucleotide sequence as compared to SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, but which still encode the same protein, and nucleic acid sequences which are capable of hybridizing under stringent conditions to the antisense sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18,

[0057]19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25. By stringent conditions it is meant that hybridization will occur only if there is at least 95%, and more preferably at least 97% identity between the sequences. RNA sequences may be in the form of MRNA while DNA sequences may be in the form of cDNA or genomic DNA obtained by cloning or produced by chemical synthetic techniques or by a combination thereof. As used herein, the term polynucleotide also includes DNAs or RNAs, as described above, that contain one or more modified bases. Examples of modified bases include, but are not limited to, backbone modifications to increase stability and incorporation of unusual bases such as inosine or tritylated bases.

[0058] For purposes of the present invention, by polypeptides it is meant to include the recombinant, natural and synthetic polypeptides with amino acid sequences encoded by the polynucleotides of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 or fragments or variants thereof with similar activities and/or levels in cancerous tissues to the amino acid sequences encoded by the polynucleotides of the present invention. Among preferred variants are those that vary from the polypeptides encoded by SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 by conservative amino acid substitutions. Conservative amino acid substitutions typically include replacement, one for another, of the aliphatic amino acids such as Ala, Val, Leu and Ile, the hydroxyl residues Ser and Thr, the acidic residues Asp and Glu, the amide residues Asn and Gln, the basic residues Lys and Arg, and the aromatic residues Phe and Tyr.

[0059] Using suppression subtractive hybridization, it has now been found that these polynucleotides, and the polypeptides encoded thereby, are upregulated in, or specific to, prostate cancer tissue. Thus, it is believed that these polynucleotides and polypeptides, also referred to herein as Prostate Cancer Specific Genes or PSGs, are useful as diagnostic markers for prostate cancer, as well as otherwise described herein.

Fragments

[0060] Also among preferred embodiments of this aspect of the present invention are polypeptides comprising fragments of PSGs, and fragments of variants and derivatives of the PSGs.

[0061] In this regard a fragment is a polypeptide having an amino acid sequence that entirely is the same as part but not all of the amino acid sequences encoded by the PSGs of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 and variants or derivatives thereof.

[0062] Such fragments may be “free-standing,” i.e., not part of or fused to other amino acids or polypeptides, or they may be comprised within a larger polypeptide of which they form a part or region. When comprised within a larger polypeptide, the presently discussed fragments most preferably form a single continuous region. However, several fragments may be comprised within a single larger polypeptide. For instance, certain preferred embodiments relate to a fragment of a PSG polypeptide of the present comprised within a precursor polypeptide designed for expression in a host and having heterologous pre and pro-polypeptide regions fused to the amino terminus of the PSG fragment and an additional region fused to the carboxyl terminus of the fragment. Therefore, fragments in one aspect of the meaning intended herein, refers to the portion or portions of a fusion polypeptide or fusion protein derived from a PSG of the present invention.

[0063] As representative examples of polypeptide fragments of the invention, there may be mentioned those which have from about 15 to about 139 amino acids.

[0064] In this context “about” includes the particularly recited range and ranges larger or smaller by several, a few, 5, 4, 3, 2 or 1 amino acid at either extreme or at both extremes. Highly preferred in this regard are the recited ranges plus or minus as many as 5 amino acids at either or at both extremes. Particularly highly preferred are the recited ranges plus or minus as many as 3 amino acids at either or at both the recited extremes. Especially preferred are ranges plus or minus 1 amino acid at either or at both extremes or the recited ranges with no additions or deletions. Most highly preferred of all in this regard are fragments from about 15 to about 45 amino acids.

[0065] Among especially preferred fragments of the invention are truncation mutants of the PSGs. Truncation mutants include PSG polypeptides encoded by SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, or variants or derivatives thereof, except for deletion of a continuous series of residues (that is, a continuous region, part or portion) that includes the amino terminus, or a continuous series of residues that includes the carboxyl terminus or, as in double truncation mutants, deletion of two continuous series of residues, one including the amino terminus and one including the carboxyl terminus. Fragments having the size ranges set out about also are preferred embodiments of truncation fragments, which are especially preferred among fragments generally.

[0066] Also preferred in this aspect of the invention are fragments characterized by structural or functional attributes of the PSGs. Preferred embodiments of the invention in this regard include fragments that comprise alpha-helix and alpha-helix forming regions (“alpha-regions”), beta-sheet and beta-sheet-forming regions (“beta-regions”), turn and turn-forming regions (“turn-regions”), coil and coil-forming regions (“coil-regions”), hydrophilic regions, hydrophobic regions, alpha amphipathic regions, beta amphipathic regions, flexible regions, surface-forming regions and high antigenic index regions of PSGs. Garnier-Robson alpha-regions, beta-regions, turn-regions and coil-regions, Chou-Fasman alpha-regions, beta-regions and turn-regions, Kyte-Doolittle hydrophilic regions and hydrophilic regions, Eisenberg alpha and beta amphipathic regions, Karplus-Schulz flexible regions, Emini surface-forming regions and Jameson-Wolf high antigenic index regions are also preferred. Among highly preferred fragments in this regard are those that comprise regions of PSGs that combine several structural features, such as several of the features set out above. Such regions may be comprised within a larger polypeptide or may be by themselves a preferred fragment of the present invention, as discussed above. It will be appreciated that the term “about” as used in this paragraph has the meaning set out above regarding fragments in general.

[0067] Further preferred regions are those that mediate activities of PSGs. Most highly preferred in this regard are fragments that have a chemical, biological or other activity of a PSG, including those with a similar activity or an improved activity, or with a decreased undesirable activity. Highly preferred in this regard are fragments that contain regions that are homologs in sequence, or in position, or in both sequence and to active regions of related polypeptides, and which include prostate specific-binding proteins. Among particularly preferred fragments in these regards are truncation mutants, as discussed above.

[0068] It will be appreciated that the invention also relates to, among others, polynucleotides encoding the aforementioned fragments, polynucleotides that hybridize to polynucleotides encoding the fragments, particularly those that hybridize under stringent conditions, and polynucleotides, such as PCR primers, for amplifying polynucleotides that encode the fragments. In these regards, preferred polynucleotides are those that correspondent to the preferred fragments, as discussed above.

Vectors, Host Cells, Expression

[0069] The present invention also relates to vectors which include polynucleotides of the present invention, host cells which are genetically engineered with vectors of the invention and the production of polypeptides of the invention by recombinant techniques.

[0070] Host cells can be genetically engineered to incorporate polynucleotides and express polypeptides of the present invention. For instance, polynucleotides may be introduced into host cells using well known techniques of infection, transduction, transfection, transvection and transformation. The polynucleotides may be introduced alone or with other polynucleotides. Such other polynucleotides may be introduced independently, co-introduced or introduced joined to the polynucleotides of the invention.

[0071] Thus, for instance, polynucleotides of the invention may be transfected into host cells with another, separate, polynucleotide encoding a selectable marker, using standard techniques for co-transfection and selection in, for instance, mammalian cells. In this case the polynucleotides generally will be stably incorporated into the host cell genome.

[0072] Alternatively, the polynucleotides may be joined to a vector containing a selectable marker for propagation in a host. The vector construct may be introduced into host cells by the aforementioned techniques. Generally, a plasmid vector is introduced as DNA in a precipitate, such as a calcium phosphate precipitate, or in a complex with a charged lipid. Electroporation also may be used to introduce polynucleotides into a host. If the vector is a virus, it may be packaged in vitro or introduced into a packaging cell and the packaged virus may be transduced into cells. A wide variety of techniques suitable for making polynucleotides and for introducing polynucleotides into cells in accordance with this aspect of the invention are well known and routine to those of skill in the art Such techniques are reviewed at length in Sambrook et al. cited above, which is illustrative of the many laboratory manuals that detail these techniques. In accordance with this aspect of the invention the vector may be, for example, a plasmid vector, a single- or double-stranded phage vector, a single- or double-stranded RNA or DNA viral vector. Such vectors may be introduced into cells as polynucleotides, preferably DNA, by well known techniques for introducing DNA and RNA into cells. The vectors, in the case of phage and viral vectors also may be and preferably are introduced into cells as packaged or encapsidated virus by well known techniques for infection and transduction. Viral vectors may be replication competent or replication defective. In the latter case viral propagation generally will occur only in complementing host cells.

[0073] Preferred among vectors, in certain respects, are those for expression of polynucleotides and polypeptides of the present invention. Generally, such vectors comprise cis-acting control regions effective for expression in a host operatively linked to the polynucleotide to be expressed. Appropriate trans-acting factors either are supplied by the host, supplied by a complementing vector or supplied by the vector itself upon introduction into the host.

[0074] In certain preferred embodiments in this regard, the vectors provide for specific expression. Such specific expression may be inducible expression or expression only in certain types of cells or both inducible and cell-specific. Particularly preferred among inducible vectors are vectors that can be induced for expression by environmental factors that are easy to manipulate, such as temperature and nutrient additives. A variety of vectors suitable to this aspect of the invention, including constitutive and inducible expression vectors for use in prokaryotic and eukaryotic hosts, are well known and employed routinely by those of skill in the art.

[0075] The engineered host cells can be cultured in conventional nutrient media, which may be modified as appropriate for, inter alia, activating promoters, selecting transformants or amplifying genes. Culture conditions, such as temperature, pH and the like, previously used with the host cell selected for expression generally will be suitable for expression of polypeptides of the present invention as will be apparent to those of skill in the art.

[0076] A great variety of expression vectors can be used to express a polypeptide of the invention. Such vectors include chromosomal, episomal and virus-derived vectors e.g., vectors derived from bacterial plasmids, from bacteriophage, from yeast episomes, from yeast chromosomal elements, from viruses such as baculoviruses, papova viruses, such as SV40, vaccinia viruses, adenoviruses, fowl pox viruses, pseudorabies viruses and retroviruses, and vectors derived from combinations thereof, such as those derived from plasmid and bacteriophage genetic elements, such as cosmids and phagemids, all may be used for expression in accordance with this aspect of the present invention. Generally, any vector suitable to maintain, propagate or express polynucleotides to express a polypeptide in a host may be used for expression in this regard.

[0077] The appropriate DNA sequence may be inserted into the vector by any of a variety of well-known and routine techniques. In general, a DNA sequence for expression is joined to an expression vector by cleaving the DNA sequence and the expression vector with one or more restriction endonucleases and then joining the restriction fragments together using T4 DNA ligase. Procedures for restriction and ligation that can be used to this end are well known and routine to those of skill. Suitable procedures in this regard, and for constructing expression vectors using alternative techniques, which also are well known and routine to those skill, are set forth in great detail in Sambrook et al. cited elsewhere herein.

[0078] The DNA sequence in the expression vector is operatively linked to appropriate expression control sequence(s), including, for instance, a promoter to direct mRNA transcription. Representatives of such promoters include the phage lambda PL promoter, the E. coli lac, trp and tac promoters, the SV40 early and late promoters and promoters of retroviral LTRs, to name just a few of the well-known promoters. It will be understood that numerous promoters not mentioned are suitable for use in this aspect of the invention are well known and readily may be employed by those of skill in the manner illustrated by the discussion and the examples herein.

[0079] In general, expression constructs will contain sites for transcription initiation and termination, and, in the transcribed region, a ribosome binding site for translation. The coding portion of the mature transcripts expressed by the constructs will include a translation initiating AUG at the beginning and a termination codon appropriately positioned at the end of the polypeptide to be translated.

[0080] In addition, the constructs may contain control regions that regulate as well as engender expression. Generally, in accordance with many commonly practiced procedures, such regions will operate by controlling transcription, such as repressor binding sites and enhancers, among others.

[0081] Vectors for propagation and expression generally will include selectable markers. Such markers also may be suitable for amplification or the vectors may contain additional markers for this purpose. In this regard, the expression vectors preferably contain one or more selectable marker genes to provide a phenotypic trait for selection of transformed host cells. Preferred markers include dihydrofolate reductase or neomycin resistance for eukaryotic cell culture, and tetracycline or ampicillin resistance genes for culturing E. coli and other bacteria.

[0082] The vector containing the appropriate DNA sequence as described elsewhere herein, as well as an appropriate promoter, and other appropriate control sequences, may be introduced into an appropriate host using a variety of well known techniques suitable to expression therein of a desired polypeptide. Representative examples of appropriate hosts include bacterial cells, such as E. coli, Streptomyces and Salmonella typhimurium cells; fungal cells, such as yeast cells; insect cells such as Drosophila S2 and Spodoptera Sf9 cells; animal cells such as CHO, COS and Bowes melanoma cells; and plant cells. Hosts for a great variety of expression constructs are well known, and those of skill will be enabled by the present disclosure readily to select a host for expressing a polypeptides in accordance with this aspect of the present invention.

[0083] More particularly, the present invention also includes recombinant constructs, such as expression constructs, comprising one or more of the sequences described above. The constructs comprise a vector, such as a plasmid or viral vector, into which such a sequence of the invention has been inserted. The sequence may be inserted in a forward or reverse orientation. In certain preferred embodiments in this regard, the construct further comprises regulatory sequences, including, for example, a promoter, operably linked to the sequence. Large numbers of suitable vectors and promoters are known to those of skill in the art, and there are many commercially available vectors suitable for use in the present invention.

[0084] The following vectors, which are commercially available, are provided by way of example. Among vectors preferred for use in bacteria are pQE70, pQE60 and pQE-9, available from Qiagen; pBS vectors, Phagescript vectors, Bluescript vectors, pNH8A, pNH16a, pNH18A, pNH46A, available from Stratagene; and ptrc99a, pKK223-3, pKK233-3, pDR540, pRIT5 available from Pharmacia. Among preferred eukaryotic vectors are PWLNEO, pSV2CAT, pOG44, pXT1 and pSG available from Stratagene; and pSVK3, pBPV, pMSG and pSVL available from Pharmacia. These vectors are listed solely by way of illustration of the many commercially available and well known vectors that are available to those of skill in the art for use in accordance with this aspect of the present invention. It will be appreciated that any other plasmid or vector suitable for, for example, introduction, maintenance, propagation or expression of a polynucleotide or polypeptide of the invention in a host may be used in this aspect of the invention.

[0085] Promoter regions can be selected from any desired gene using vectors that contain a reporter transcription unit lacking a promoter region, such as a chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (“cat”) transcription unit, downstream of restriction site or sites for introducing a candidate promoter fragment; i.e., a fragment that may contain a promoter. As is well known, introduction into the vector of a promoter-containing fragment at the restriction site upstream of the cat gene engenders production of CAT activity, which can be detected by standard CAT assays. Vectors suitable to this end are well known and readily available. Two such vectors are pKK232-8 and pCM7. Thus, promoters for expression of polynucleotides of the present invention include not only well known and readily available promoters, but also promoters that readily may be obtained by the foregoing technique, using a reporter gene.

[0086] Among known bacterial promoters suitable for expression of polynucleotides and polypeptides in accordance with the present invention are the E. coli laci and lacZ and promoters, the T3 and T7 promoters, the gpt promoter, the lambda PR, PL promoters and the trp promoter. Among known eukaryotic promoters suitable in this regard are the CMV immediate early promoter, the HSV thymidine kinase promoter, the early and late SV40 promoters, the promoters of retroviral LTRS, such as those of the Rous sarcoma virus (“RSV”), and metallothionein promoters, such as the mouse metallothionein-I promoter.

[0087] Selection of appropriate vectors and promoters for expression in a host cell is a well known procedure and the requisite techniques for expression vector construction, introduction of the vector into the host and expression in the host are routine skills in the art.

[0088] The present invention also relates to host cells containing the above-described constructs discussed above. The host cell can be a higher eukaryotic cell, such as a mammalian cell, or a lower eukaryotic cell, such as a yeast cell, or the host cell can be a prokaryotic cell, such as a bacterial cell.

[0089] Introduction of the construct into the host cell can be effected by calcium phosphate transfection, DEAE-dextran mediated transfection, cationic lipid-mediated transfection, electroporation, transduction, infection or other methods. Such methods are described in many standard laboratory manuals, such as Davis et al. BASIC METHODS IN MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, (1986).

[0090] Constructs in host cells can be used in a conventional manner to produce the gene product encoded by the recombinant sequence. Alternatively, the polypeptides of the invention can be synthetically produced by conventional peptide synthesizers.

[0091] Mature proteins can be expressed in mammalian cells, yeast, bacteria, or other cells under the control of appropriate promoters. Cell-free translation systems can also be employed to produce such proteins using RNAs derived from the DNA constructs of the present invention. Appropriate cloning and expression vectors for use with prokaryotic and eukaryotic hosts are described by Sambrook et al., MOLECULAR CLONING: A LABORATORY MANUAL, 2nd Ed., Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. (1989).

[0092] Generally, recombinant expression vectors will include origins of replication, a promoter derived from a highly-expressed gene to direct transcription of a downstream structural sequence, and a selectable marker to permit isolation of vector containing cells after exposure to the vector. Among suitable promoters are those derived from the genes that encode glycolytic enzymes such as 3-phosphoglycerate kinase (“PGK”), a-factor, acid phosphatase, and heat shock proteins, among others. Selectable markers include the ampicillin resistance gene of E. coli and the trpl gene of S. cerevisiae.

[0093] Transcription of the DNA encoding the polypeptides of the present invention by higher eukaryotes may be increased by inserting an enhancer sequence into the vector. Enhancers are cis-acting elements of DNA, usually about from 10 to 300 bp that act to increase transcriptional activity of a promoter in a given host cell-type. Examples of enhancers include the SV40 enhancer, which is located on the late side of the replication origin at bp 100 to 270, the cytomegalovirus early promoter enhancer, the polyoma enhancer on the late side of the replication origin, and adenovirus enhancers.

[0094] Polynucleotides of the invention, encoding the heterologous structural sequence of a polypeptide of the invention generally will be inserted into the vector using standard techniques so that it is operably linked to the promoter for expression. The polynucleotide will be positioned so that the transcription start site is located appropriately 5′ to a ribosome binding site. The ribosome binding site will be 5′ to the AUG that initiates translation of the polypeptide to be expressed. Generally, there will be no other open reading frames that begin with an initiation codon, usually AUG, and lie between the ribosome binding site and the initiating AUG. Also, generally, there will be a translation stop codon at the end of the polypeptide and there will be a polyadenylation signal and a transcription termination signal appropriately disposed at the 3′ end of the transcribed region.

[0095] For secretion of the translated protein into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum, into the periplasmic space or into the extracellular environment, appropriate secretion signals may be incorporated into the expressed polypeptide. The signals may be endogenous to the polypeptide or they may be heterologous signals.

[0096] The polypeptide may be expressed in a modified form, such as a fusion protein, and may include not only secretion signals but also additional heterologous functional regions. Thus, for instance, a region of additional amino acids, particularly charged amino acids, may be added to the N-terminus of the polypeptide to improve stability and persistence in the host cell, during purification or during subsequent handling and storage. Also, region also may be added to the polypeptide to facilitate purification. Such regions may be removed prior to final preparation of the polypeptide. The addition of peptide moieties to polypeptides to engender secretion or excretion, to improve stability and to facilitate purification, among others, are familiar and routine techniques in the art.

[0097] Suitable prokaryotic hosts for propagation, maintenance or expression of polynucleotides and polypeptides in accordance with the invention include Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis and Salmonella typhimurium. Various species of Pseudomonas, Streptomyces, and Staphylococcus are suitable hosts in this regard. Moreover, many other hosts also known to those of skill may be employed in this regard.

[0098] As a representative but non-limiting example, useful expression vectors for bacterial use can comprise a selectable marker and bacterial origin of replication derived from commercially available plasmids comprising genetic elements of the well known cloning vector pBR322. Such commercial vectors include, for example, pKK223-3 (Pharmacia Fine Chemicals, Uppsala, Sweden) and GEM1 (Promega Biotec, Madison, Wis., USA). These pBR322 “backbone” sections are combined with an appropriate promoter and the structural sequence to be expressed.

[0099] Following transformation of a suitable host strain and growth of the host strain to an appropriate cell density, where the selected promoter is inducible it is induced by appropriate means (e.g., temperature shift or exposure to chemical inducer) and cells are cultured for an additional period.

[0100] Cells typically then are harvested by centrifugation, disrupted by physical or chemical means, and the resulting crude extract retained for further purification. Microbial cells employed in expression of proteins can be disrupted by any convenient method, including freeze-thaw cycling, sonication, mechanical disruption, or use of cell lysing agents, such methods are well know to those skilled in the art.

[0101] Various mammalian cell culture systems can be employed for expression, as well. Examples of mammalian expression systems include the COS-7 lines of monkey kidney fibroblast, described in Gluzman et al., Cell 23: 175 (1981). Other cell lines capable of expressing a compatible vector include for example, the C127, 3T3, CHO, HeLa, human kidney 293 and BHK cell lines.

[0102] Mammalian expression vectors will comprise an origin of replication, a suitable promoter and enhancer, and also any necessary ribosome binding sites, polyadenylation sites, splice donor and acceptor sites, transcriptional termination sequences, and 5′ flanking non-transcribed sequences that are necessary for expression. In certain preferred embodiments in this regard DNA sequences derived from the SV40 splice sites, and the SV40 polyadenylation sites are used for required non-transcribed genetic elements of these types.

[0103] The PSG polypeptide can be recovered and purified from recombinant cell cultures by well-known methods including ammonium sulfate or ethanol precipitation, acid extraction, anion or cation exchange chromatography, phosphocellulose chromatography, hydrophobic interaction chromatography, affinity chromatography, hydroxylapatite chromatography and lectin chromatography. Most preferably, high performance liquid chromatography (“HPLC”) is employed for purification. Well known techniques for refolding protein may be employed to regenerate active conformation when the polypeptide is denatured during isolation and or purification.

[0104] Polypeptides of the present invention include naturally purified products, products of chemical synthetic procedures, and products produced by recombinant techniques from a prokaryotic or eukaryotic host, including, for example, bacterial, yeast, higher plant, insect and mammalian cells. Depending upon the host employed in a recombinant production procedure, the polypeptides of the present invention may be glycosylated or may be non-glycosylated. In addition, polypeptides of the invention may also include an initial modified methionine residue, in some cases as a result of host-mediated processes.

[0105] PSG polynucleotides and polypeptides may be used in accordance with the present invention for a variety of applications, particularly those that make use of the chemical and biological properties of the PSGs. Additional applications relate to diagnosis and to treatment of disorders of cells, tissues and organisms. These aspects of the invention are illustrated further by the following discussion.

Antibodies

[0106] The PSG polypeptides of the invention or their fragments or variants thereof, or cells expressing them can also be used as immunogens to produce antibodies immunospecific for the PSG polypeptides. The term “immunospecific” means that the antibodies have substantially greater affinity for the polypeptides of the invention than their affinity for other related polypeptides in the prior art. These antibodies can be polyclonal or monoclonal. In addition, by the term “antibody”, it is meant to include chimeric, single chain and humanized and fully human antibodies as well as Fab fragments or products of Fab expression libraries.

[0107] Antibodies generated against the PSG polypeptides can be obtained by administering the polypeptides or epitope-bearing fragments, variants or cells to an animal, preferably a nonhuman, using routine protocols. For preparation of monoclonal antibodies, any technique which provides antibodies produced by continuous cell line cultures can be used. Examples include the hybridoma technique (Kohler, G. and Milstein, C., Nature (1975) 256:495-497), the trioma technique, the human B-cell hybridoma technique (Kozbor et al., Immunology Today (1983) 4:72) and the EBV-hybridoma technique (Cole et al., MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES AND CANCER THERAPY, pp. 77-96, Alan R. Liss, Inc., 1985).

[0108] Techniques for the production of single chain antibodies (U.S. Pat. No. 4,946,778) can also be adapted to produce single chain antibodies to polypeptides of this invention. Also, transgenic mice, or other organisms including other mammals, can be used to express humanized antibodies.

[0109] The above-described antibodies can be used to isolate or to identify clones expressing the polypeptide or to purify the polypeptides by affinity chromatography.

[0110] Antibodies against PSG polypeptides can also be used to treat prostate cancer, among others.

Diagnostic Tools

[0111] The present invention also relates to diagnostic tools such as antibodies which are immunospecific for PSGs or labeled oligonucleotide probes which hybridize to PSGs.

[0112] Antibodies immunospecific for PSGs are described in detail in the preceding section.

[0113] Antisense oligonucleotides which hybridize to a portion of a polynucleotide of the present invention can be chemically synthesized via an automated oligonucleotide synthesizer or produced via alternative methods such as in vitro recombinant DNA-mediated techniques and by expression of DNA in cells and organisms. By the term “oligonucleotide” it is meant relatively short polynucleotides of about 8 to 50 nucleobases. Most often oligonucleotides comprise single-stranded deoxyribonucleotides. However, oligonucleotides may also comprise single-or double-stranded ribonucleotide, RNA:DNA hybrids and double-stranded DNAs.

Methods of Use

[0114] The present invention also relates to assays and methods, both quantitative and qualitative, for detecting, diagnosing, monitoring, staging and prognosticating cancers by comparing levels of PSG in a human patient with those of PSG in a normal human control. For purposes of the present invention, what is meant by “PSG levels” is, among other things, native protein expressed by a polynucleotide sequence comprising SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25. By “PSG” it is also meant herein polynucleotides which, due to degeneracy in genetic coding, comprise variations in nucleotide sequence as compared to SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, but which still encode the same protein. The native protein being detected may be whole, a breakdown product, a complex of molecules or chemically modified. In the alternative, what is meant by “PSG” as used herein, means the native mRNA encoded by the gene comprising the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25, or a polynucleotide which is capable of hybridizing under stringent conditions to the antisense sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25. Such levels are preferably determined in at least one of cells, tissues and/or bodily fluids, including determination of normal and abnormal levels. Thus, for instance, a diagnostic assay in accordance with the invention for diagnosing overexpression of PSG protein compared to normal control bodily fluids, cells, or tissue samples may be used to diagnose the presence of prostate cancer.

[0115] All the methods of the present invention may optionally include determining the levels of other cancer markers as well as PSG. Other cancer markers, in addition to PSG, useful in the present invention will depend on the cancer being tested and are known to those of skill in the art.

Diagnostic Assays

[0116] The present invention provides methods for diagnosing the presence of cancer, and in particular prostate cancer, by analyzing for changes in levels of PSG in cells, tissues or bodily fluids compared with levels of PSG in cells, tissues or bodily fluids of preferably the same type from a normal human control, wherein an increase in levels of PSG in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with the presence of prostate cancer.

[0117] Without limiting the instant invention, typically, for a quantitative diagnostic assay a positive result indicating the patient being tested has cancer is one in which cells, tissues or bodily fluid levels of the cancer marker, such as PSG, are at least two times higher, and most preferably are at least five times higher, than in preferably the same cells, tissues or bodily fluid of a normal human control.

[0118] The present invention also provides a method of diagnosing metastatic prostate cancer in a patient having prostate cancer which has not yet metastasized for the onset of metastasis. In the method of the present invention, a human cancer patient suspected of having prostate cancer which may have metastasized (but which was not previously known to have metastasized) is identified. This is accomplished by a variety of means known to those of skill in the art.

[0119] In the present invention, determining the presence of PSG levels in cells, tissues or bodily fluid, is particularly useful for discriminating between prostate cancer which has not metastasized and prostate cancer which has metastasized. Existing techniques have difficulty discriminating between prostate cancer which has metastasized and prostate cancer which has not metastasized and proper treatment selection is often dependent upon such knowledge.

[0120] In the present invention, the cancer marker levels are measured in such cells, tissues or bodily fluid is PSG, and are then compared with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissue or bodily fluid type of a normal human control. That is, if the cancer marker being observed is PSG in serum, this level is preferably compared with the level of PSG in serum of a normal human control. An increase in the PSG in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with prostate cancer which has metastasized.

[0121] Without limiting the instant invention, typically, for a quantitative diagnostic assay a positive result indicating the cancer in the patient being tested or monitored has metastasized is one in which cells, tissues or bodily fluid levels of the cancer marker, such as PSG, are at least two times higher, and most preferably are at least five times higher, than in preferably the same cells, tissues or bodily fluid of a normal patient.

[0122] Normal human control as used herein includes a human patient without cancer and/or non cancerous samples from the patient. In the methods for diagnosing or monitoring for metastasis, normal human control may preferably also include samples from a human patient that is determined by reliable methods to have prostate cancer which has not metastasized.

Staging

[0123] The invention also provides a method of staging prostate cancer in a human patient. The method comprises identifying a human patient having such cancer and analyzing cells, tissues or bodily fluid from such human patient for PSG. The PSG levels determined in the patient are then compared with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues or bodily fluid type of a normal human control, wherein an increase in PSG levels in the human patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which is progressing and a decrease in the levels of PSG (but still increased over true normal levels) is associated with a cancer which is regressing or in remission.

Monitoring

[0124] Further provided is a method of monitoring prostate cancer in a human patient having such cancer for the onset of metastasis. The method comprises identifying a human patient having such cancer that is not known to have metastasized; periodically analyzing cells, tissues or bodily fluid from such human patient for PSG; and comparing the PSG levels determined in the human patient with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues or bodily fluid type of a normal human control, wherein an increase in PSG levels in the human patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which has metastasized. In this method, normal human control samples may also include prior patient samples.

[0125] Further provided by this invention is a method of monitoring the change in stage of prostate cancer in a human patient having such cancer. The method comprises identifying a human patient having such cancer; periodically analyzing cells, tissues or bodily fluid from such human patient for PSG; and comparing the PSG levels determined in the human patient with levels of PSG in preferably the same cells, tissues or bodily fluid type of a normal human control, wherein an increase in PSG levels in the human patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which is progressing in stage and a decrease in the levels of PSG is associated with a cancer which is regressing in stage or in remission. In this method, normal human control samples may also include prior patient samples.

[0126] Monitoring a patient for onset of metastasis is periodic and preferably done on a quarterly basis. However, this may be done more or less frequently depending on the cancer, the particular patient, and the stage of the cancer.

Prognostic Testing and Clinical Trial Monitoring

[0127] The methods described herein can further be utilized as prognostic assays to identify subjects having or at risk of developing a disease or disorder associated with increased levels of PSG. The present invention provides a method in which a test sample is obtained from a human patient and PSG is detected. The presence of higher PSG levels as compared to normal human controls is diagnostic for the human patient being at risk for developing cancer, particularly prostate cancer.

[0128] The effectiveness of therapeutic agents to decrease expression or activity of the PSGs of the invention can also be monitored by analyzing levels of expression of the PSGs in a human patient in clinical trials or in in vitro screening assays such as in human cells. In this way, the gene expression pattern can serve as a marker, indicative of the physiological response of the human patient, or cells as the case may be, to the agent being tested.

Detection of Genetic Lesions or Mutations

[0129] The methods of the present invention can also be used to detect genetic lesions or mutations in PSG, thereby determining if a human with the genetic lesion is at risk for prostate cancer or has prostate cancer. Genetic lesions can be detected, for example, by ascertaining the existence of a deletion and/or addition and/or substitution of one or more nucleotides from the PSGs of this invention, a chromosomal rearrangement of PSG, aberrant modification of PSG (such as of the methylation pattern of the genomic DNA), the presence of a non-wild type splicing pattern of a MRNA transcript of PSG, allelic loss of PSG, and/or inappropriate post-translational modification of PSG protein. Methods to detect such lesions in the PSGs of this invention are known to those of skill in the art.

Assay Techniques

[0130] Assay techniques that can be used to determine levels of gene expression (including protein levels), such as PSG of the present invention, in a sample derived from a patient are well known to those of skill in the art. Such assay methods include, without limitation, radioimmunoassays, reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) assays, immunohistochemistry assays, in situ hybridization assays, competitive-binding assays, Western Blot analyses, ELISA assays and proteomic approaches: two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2D electrophoresis) and non-gel based approaches such as mass spectrometry or protein interaction profiling. Among these, ELISAs are frequently preferred to diagnose a gene's expressed protein in biological fluids.

[0131] An ELISA assay initially comprises preparing an antibody, if not readily available from a commercial source, specific to PSG, preferably a monoclonal antibody. In addition a reporter antibody generally is prepared which binds specifically to PSG. The reporter antibody is attached to a detectable reagent such as radioactive, fluorescent or enzymatic reagent, for example horseradish peroxidase enzyme or alkaline phosphatase.

[0132] To carry out the ELISA, antibody specific to PSG is incubated on a solid support, e.g. a polystyrene dish, that binds the antibody. Any free protein binding sites on the dish are then covered by incubating with a non-specific protein such as bovine serum albumin. Next, the sample to be analyzed is incubated in the dish, during which time PSG binds to the specific antibody attached to the polystyrene dish. Unbound sample is washed out with buffer. A reporter antibody specifically directed to PSG and linked to a detectable reagent such as horseradish peroxidase is placed in the dish resulting in binding of the reporter antibody to any monoclonal antibody bound to PSG. Unattached reporter antibody is then washed out. Reagents for peroxidase activity, including a calorimetric substrate are then added to the dish. Immobilized peroxidase, linked to PSG antibodies, produces a colored reaction product. The amount of color developed in a given time period is proportional to the amount of PSG protein present in the sample. Quantitative results typically are obtained by reference to a standard curve.

[0133] A competition assay can also be employed wherein antibodies specific to PSG are attached to a solid support and labeled PSG and a sample derived from the host are passed over the solid support. The amount of label detected which is attached to the solid support can be correlated to a quantity of PSG in the sample.

[0134] Using all or a portion of a nucleic acid sequence of a PSG of the present invention as a hybridization probe, nucleic acid methods can also be used to detect PSG mRNA as a marker for prostate cancer. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and other nucleic acid methods, such as ligase chain reaction (LCR) and nucleic acid sequence based amplification (NASBA), can be used to detect malignant cells for diagnosis and monitoring of various malignancies. For example, reverse-transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) is a powerful technique which can be used to detect the presence of a specific mRNA population in a complex mixture of thousands of other MRNA species. In RT-PCR, an mRNA species is first reverse transcribed to complementary DNA (cDNA) with use of the enzyme reverse transcriptase; the cDNA is then amplified as in a standard PCR reaction. RT-PCR can thus reveal by amplification the presence of a single species of mRNA. Accordingly, if the mRNA is highly specific for the cell that produces it, RT-PCR can be used to identify the presence of a specific type of cell.

[0135] Hybridization to clones or oligonucleotides arrayed on a solid support (i.e. gridding) can be used to both detect the expression of and quantitate the level of expression of that gene. In this approach, a cDNA encoding the PSG gene is fixed to a substrate. The substrate may be of any suitable type including but not limited to glass, nitrocellulose, nylon or plastic. At least a portion of the DNA encoding the PSG gene is attached to the substrate and then incubated with the analyte, which may be RNA or a complementary DNA (cDNA) copy of the RNA, isolated from the tissue of interest. Hybridization between the substrate bound DNA and the analyte can be detected and quantitated by several means including but not limited to radioactive labeling or fluorescence labeling of the analyte or a secondary molecule designed to detect the hybrid. Quantitation of the level of gene expression can be done by comparison of the intensity of the signal from the analyte compared with that determined from known standards. The standards can be obtained by in vitro transcription of the target gene, quantitating the yield, and then using that material to generate a standard curve.

[0136] Of the proteomic approaches, 2D electrophoresis is a technique well known to those in the art. Isolation of individual proteins from a sample such as serum is accomplished using sequential separation of proteins by different characteristics usually on polyacrylamide gels. First, proteins are separated by size using an electric current. The current acts uniformly on all proteins, so smaller proteins move farther on the gel than larger proteins. The second dimension applies a current perpendicular to the first and separates proteins not on the basis of size but on the specific electric charge carried by each protein. Since no two proteins with different sequences are identical on the basis of both size and charge, the result of a 2D separation is a square gel in which each protein occupies a unique spot. Analysis of the spots with chemical or antibody probes, or subsequent protein microsequencing can reveal the relative abundance of a given protein and the identity of the proteins in the sample.

[0137] The above tests can be carried out on samples derived from a variety of cells, bodily fluids and/or tissue extracts such as homogenates or solubilized tissue obtained from a patient. Tissue extracts are obtained routinely from tissue biopsy and autopsy material. Bodily fluids useful in the present invention include blood, urine, saliva or any other bodily secretion or derivative thereof. By blood it is meant to include whole blood, plasma, serum or any derivative of blood.

In Vivo Targeting of PSG/Prostate Cancer Therapy

[0138] Identification of these PSGs is also useful in the rational design of new therapeutics for imaging and treating cancers, and in particular prostate cancer. For example, in one embodiment, antibodies which specifically bind to a PSG can be raised and used in vivo in patients suspected of suffering from prostate cancer. Antibodies which specifically bind PSG can be injected into a patient suspected of having prostate cancer for diagnostic and/or therapeutic purposes. Thus, another aspect of the present invention provides for a method for preventing the onset and treatment of prostate cancer in a human patient in need of such treatment by administering to the patient an effective amount of antibody. By “effective amount” it is meant the amount or concentration of antibody needed to bind to the target antigens expressed on the tumor to cause tumor shrinkage for surgical removal, or disappearance of the tumor. The binding of the antibody to the overexpressed PSG is believed to cause the death of the cancer cell expressing such PSG. The preparation and use of antibodies for in vivo diagnosis and treatment is well known in the art. For example, antibody-chelators labeled with Indium-111 have been described for use in the radioimmunoscintographic imaging of carcinoembryonic antigen expressing tumors (Sumerdon et al. Nucl. Med. Biol. 1990 17:247-254). In particular, these antibody-chelators have been used in detecting tumors in patients suspected of having recurrent colorectal cancer (Griffin et al. J. Clin. Onc. 1991 9:631-640). Antibodies with paramagnetic ions as labels for use in magnetic resonance imaging have also been described (Lauffer, R. B. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 1991 22:339-342). Antibodies directed against PSG can be used in a similar manner. Labeled antibodies which specifically bind PSG can be injected into patients suspected of having prostate cancer for the purpose of diagnosing or staging of the disease status of the patient. The label used will be selected in accordance with the imaging modality to be used. For example, radioactive labels such as Indium-111, Technetium-99m or Iodine-131 can be used for planar scans or single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Positron emitting labels such as Fluorine-19 can be used in positron emission tomography. Paramagnetic ions such as Gadlinium (III) or Manganese (II) can be used in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Presence of the label, as compared to imaging of normal tissue, permits determination of the spread of the cancer. The amount of label within an organ or tissue also allows determination of the presence or absence of cancer in that organ or tissue.

[0139] Antibodies which can be used in in vivo methods include polyclonal, monoclonal and omniclonal antibodies and antibodies prepared via molecular biology techniques. Antibody fragments and aptamers and single-stranded oligonucleotides such as those derived from an in vitro evolution protocol referred to as SELEX and well known to those skilled in the art can also be used.

Vaccines

[0140] Another aspect of the invention relates to compositions and methods for inducing an immunological response in a mammal In one embodiment, a mammal is inoculated with a PSG polypeptide, or a fragment or variant thereof, in an amount adequate to produce an antibody and/or T cell immune response against PSG polypeptide. In another embodiment, a vector directing expression of PSG polynucleotide in vivo is used to induce such an immunological response and to produce antibody. The immune response against the PSG polypeptide is expected to protect the mammal from diseases, in particular prostate cancer.

[0141] Thus, the present invention also relates to an immunological/vaccine formulation (composition) which, when introduced into a mammal, induces an immunological response in that mammal to PSG polypeptide wherein the composition comprises a PSG polypeptide, fragment or variant thereof or a vector expressing a PSG gene or fragment thereof. The vaccine formulation may further comprise a suitable carrier. Since PSG polypeptide may be broken down in the stomach, the vaccine formulation is preferably administered parenterally via subcutaneous, intramuscular, intravenous, or intradermal injection. Formulations suitable for parenteral administration include aqueous and non-aqueous sterile injection solutions which may contain anti-oxidants, buffers, bacteriostats and solutes which render the formulation isotonic with the blood of the recipient; and aqueous and non-aqueous sterile suspensions which may include suspending agents or thickening agents. The formulations may be presented in unit-dose or multi-dose containers, for example, as sealed ampules and vials, and may be stored in a freeze-dried condition requiring only the addition of the sterile liquid carrier immediately prior to use. The vaccine formulation may also include adjuvant systems for enhancing the immunogenicity of the formulation, such as oil-in water systems and other systems known in the art. The dosage will depend on the specific activity of the vaccine and can be readily determined by routine experimentation.

Screening Assays

[0142] The PSG polypeptides of the present invention can also be employed in screening processes for compounds which activate (agonists) or inhibit activation of (antagonists, or otherwise called inhibitors) the PSG polypeptides of the present invention. Thus, polypeptides of the invention can be used to identify agonists or antagonists from, for example, cells, cell-free preparations, chemical libraries, and natural product mixtures. These agonists or antagonists may be natural or modified substrates, ligands, receptors, enzymes, etc., as the case may be, of the polypeptides of the present invention; or may be structural or functional mimetics of the polypeptide of the present invention. See Coligan et al., Current Protocols in Immunology 1(2):Chapter 5 (1991).

[0143] PSG polypeptides are responsible for various biological functions, including pathologies such as prostate cancer. Accordingly, it is desirous to identify compounds which stimulate PSG polypeptides on the one hand (agonists) and which can inhibit the function of PSG polypeptides (antagonists) on the other hand. Agonists and antagonists can be employed for therapeutic and prophylactic purposes for conditions such as prostate cancer.

[0144] In general, such screening procedures involve using appropriate cells which express the PSG polypeptide or respond to PSG polypeptide of the present invention. Such cells include those from mammals, yeast, Drosophila and E. coli. Cells which express the PSG polypeptide (or cell membranes containing the expressed polypeptide) or respond to PSG polypeptides are then contacted with a candidate compound to observe binding, or stimulation or inhibition of a functional response. The PSG activity of the cells which were contacted with the candidate compounds is compared with the PSG activity in the same type of cells which were not contacted with the candidate compounds.

[0145] The assays may simply test binding of a candidate compound wherein adherence to the cells bearing the PSG polypeptide is detected by means of a label directly or indirectly associated with the candidate compound or in an assay involving competition with a labeled competitor. Further, these assays can test whether the candidate compound results in a signal generated by activation of the PSG polypeptide using detection systems appropriate to the cells bearing the PSG polypeptide. Inhibitors of activation are generally assayed in the presence of a known agonist and the effect of the candidate compound upon activation by the agonist is observed.

[0146] Alternatively, the assays may comprise the steps of mixing a candidate compound with a solution containing a PSG polypeptide to form a mixture, measuring PSG activity in the mixture, and comparing the PSG activity of the mixture to a standard.

[0147] The PSG polynucleotide, polypeptides and antibodies immunospecific for the polypeptides can also be used to configure assays for detecting the effect of added compounds on the production of PSG mRNA and polypeptides in cells. For example, an ELISA for measuring secreted or cell associated levels of PSG polypeptide using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies can be constructed by standard methods known in the art. The ELISA can then be used to discover agents which may inhibit or enhance the production of PSG from suitably manipulated cells or tissues. Standard methods for conducting these screening assays are well understood in the art.

[0148] The PSG polypeptides can also be used to identify membrane bound or soluble receptors, if any, through standard receptor binding techniques known in the art. These include, but are not limited to, ligand binding and crosslinking assays in which the PSG is labeled with a radioactive isotope (e.g. ¹²⁵I), chemically modified (e.g. biotinylated), or fused to a peptide sequence suitable for detection or purification, and incubated with a source of the putative receptor (cells, cell membranes, cell supernatants, tissue extracts, bodily fluids). Other methods include biophysical techniques such as surface plasmon resonance and spectroscopy. In addition to being used for purification and cloning of the receptor, these binding assays can be used to identify agonists and antagonists of PSG which compete with the binding of PSG to receptors. Standard methods for conducting these screening assays are well understood in the art.

[0149] Examples of potential PSG polypeptide antagonists include, but are not limited to: antibodies; oligonucleotides or proteins which are closely related to the PSGs; ligands, substrates, receptors, and enzymes of the PSG polypeptides; fragment of these ligands, substrates, receptors and enzymes; and small molecules which bind to the polypeptide of the present invention so that the activity of the polypeptide is prevented.

[0150] Thus, the present invention also relates to screening kits for identifying agonists, antagonists, ligands, receptors, substrates, enzymes, etc. for PSG polypeptides; or compounds which decrease or enhance the production of PSG polypeptides. Such kits preferably comprise a PSG polypeptide; a recombinant cell expressing a PSG polypeptide or a cell membrane expressing a PSG polypeptide; and an antibody to a PSG polypeptide.

Prophylactic and Therapeutic Methods

[0151] This invention also relates to methods of treating abnormal conditions such as, prostate cancer, related to both an excess of and insufficient amounts of PSG polypeptide activity.

[0152] If the activity of PSG polypeptide is in excess, several approaches are available. One approach comprises administering to a subject an inhibitor compound (antagonist) as hereinabove described along with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier in an amount effective to inhibit the function of the PSG polypeptide, such as, for example, by blocking the binding of ligands, substrates, enzymes, receptors, etc., or by inhibiting a second signal, and thereby alleviating the abnormal condition. In another approach, soluble forms of PSG polypeptides still capable of binding the ligand, substrate, enzymes, receptors, etc. in competition with endogenous PSG polypeptide can be administered. Typical embodiments of such competitors comprise fragments of the PSG polypeptide.

[0153] In still another approach, expression of the gene encoding endogenous PSG polypeptide can be inhibited using expression blocking techniques. Known blocking techniques involve the use of antisense sequences, either internally generated or separately administered. See, for example, O'Connor, J Neurochem (1991) 56:560 in Oligodeoxynucleotides as Antisense Inhibitors of Gene Expression, CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fla. (1988). Alternatively, oligonucleotides which form triple helices with the gene can be supplied. See, for example, Lee et al., Nucleic Acids Res (1979) 6:3073; Cooney et al., Science (1988) 241:456; Dervan et al. , Science (1991) 251:1360. These oligomers can be administered per se or the relevant oligomers can be expressed in vivo.

[0154] Several approaches are also available for treating abnormal conditions related to an under-expression of PSG and its activity. One approach comprises administering to a subject a therapeutically effective amount of a compound which activates PSG polypeptide, i.e., an agonist as described above, in combination with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, to thereby alleviate the abnormal condition. Alternatively, gene therapy can be employed to effect the endogenous production of PSG by the relevant cells in the subject. For example, a polynucleotide of the invention can be engineered for expression in a viral vector such as a replication defective retroviral vector. The retroviral expression construct can then be isolated and introduced into a packaging cell transduced with a retroviral plasmid vector containing RNA encoding a polypeptide of the present invention such that the packaging cell now produces infectious viral particles containing the gene of interest. These producer cells can be administered to a subject for engineering cells in vivo and expression of the polypeptide in vivo. For an overview of gene therapy, see Chapter 20, Gene Therapy and other Molecular Genetic-based Therapeutic Approaches, (and references cited therein) in Human Molecular Genetics, T Strachan and A P Read, BIOS Scientific Publishers Ltd (1996). Another approach is to administer a therapeutic amount of PSG polypeptide in combination with a suitable pharmaceutical carrier.

Formulation and Administration

[0155] Peptides, such as a soluble form of PSG polypeptide, and agonist and antagonist peptides or small molecules, can be formulated in various combinations with suitable pharmaceutical carriers. These formulations comprise a therapeutically effective amount of the peptide or small molecule, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or excipient. Such carriers include, but are not limited to, saline, buffered saline, dextrose, water, glycerol, ethanol, and combinations thereof. The formulation is selected in accordance with the mode of administration, and is well within the skill of the art. The invention further relates to pharmaceutical packs and kits comprising one or more containers filled with one or more of the ingredients of the aforementioned compositions of the invention.

[0156] The compositions of present invention can be employed alone or in conjunction with other compounds, such as other therapeutic compounds.

[0157] Preferred forms of systemic administration of these pharmaceutical compositions include injection, typically by intravenous injection. Other injection routes, such as subcutaneous, intramuscular, or intraperitoneal, can also be used. Alternative means for systemic administration include transmucosal and transdermal administration using penetrants such as bile salts or fusidic acids or other detergents. In addition, if properly formulated in enteric or encapsulated formulations, oral administration may also be possible. These compositions can also be administered topically in the form of salves, pastes, gels and the like.

[0158] The dosage range required depends on the composition, the route of administration, the nature of the formulation, the nature of the subject's condition, and the judgment of the attending practitioner. Suitable dosages, however, are generally in the range of 0.1-100 μg of peptide or small molecule per kg of subject. Wide variations in the needed dosage, however, are to be expected in view of the variety of compounds available and the differing efficiencies of various routes of administration. For example, oral administration is expected to require higher dosages than administration by intravenous injection. Variations in these dosage levels can be adjusted using standard empirical routines for optimization, as is well understood in the art.

[0159] Polypeptides used in treatment can also be generated endogenously in the subject, in treatment modalities often referred to as “gene therapy” as described above. Thus, for example, cells from a subject may be engineered with a PSG polynucleotide of the present invention, such as a DNA or RNA, to encode a polypeptide ex vivo, and for example, by the use of a retroviral plasmid vector to encode a polypeptide in vivo. The cells are then introduced into the subject.

EXAMPLES

[0160] The present invention is further described by the following examples. These examples are provided solely to illustrate the invention by reference to specific embodiments. These exemplifications, while illustrating certain aspects of the invention, does not portray the limitations or circumscribe the scope of the disclosed invention.

[0161] The example is carried out using standard techniques, which are well known and routine to those of skill in the art, except where otherwise described in detail. Routine molecular biology techniques of the following example can be carried out as described in standard laboratory manuals, such as Sambrook et al., MOLECULAR CLONING: A LABORATORY MANUAL, 2nd Ed.; Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. (1989).

Example 1 Suppression Subtractive Hybridization (Clontech PCR-SELECT)

[0162] Clontech PCR-SELECT is a PCR based subtractive hybridization method designed to selectively enrich for cDNAs corresponding to mRNAs differentially expressed between two MRNA populations (Diatchenko et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, Vol. 93, pp. 6025-6030, 1996).

[0163] In this method, cDNA is prepared from the two mRNA populations which are to be compared (Tester: cDNA population in which the differentially expressed messages are sought and Driver: cDNA population in which the differentially expressed transcripts are absent or low). The tester sample is separated in two parts and different PCR adapters are ligated to the 5′ ends. Each tester is separately annealed to excess driver (first annealing) and then pooled and again annealed (second annealing) to excess driver. During the first annealing, sequences common to both populations anneal. Additionally, the concentration of high and low abundance messages are normalized since annealing is faster for abundant molecules due to the second order kinetics of hybridization. During the second annealing, cDNAs unique or overabundant to the tester can anneal together. Such molecules have different adapters at their ends. The addition of additional driver during the second annealing enhances the enrichment of the desired differentially expressed sequences. During subsequent PCR, molecules that have different adapters at each end amplify exponentially. Molecules which have identical adapters, or adapters at only one end, or no adapters (driver sequences) either do not amplify or undergo linear amplification. The end result is enrichment for cDNAs corresponding to differentially expressed messages (unique to the tester or upregulated in the tester).

[0164] This technique was used to identify transcripts unique to prostate tissues or messages overexpressed in prostate cancer. Pairs of matched samples isolated from the same patient, a cancer sample, and the “normal” adjacent tissue from the same tissue type were utilized. The mRNA from the cancer tissue is used as the “tester”, and the non-cancer mRNA as a “driver”. The non-cancer “driver” is from the same individual and tissue as the cancer sample (Matched). Alternatively the “driver” can be from a different individual but the same tissue as the tumor sample (unmatched) . In some cases, mixtures of mRNAs derived from non-cancer tissue types different from the cancer tissue type were used as the “driver”. This approach allows the identification of transcripts whose expression is specific or upregulated in the cancer tissue type analyzed.

[0165] Several subtracted libraries were generated for prostate. The product of the subtraction experiments was used to generate cDNA libraries. These cDNA libraries contain Expressed Sequence Tags (ESTs) from genes that are prostate cancer specific, or upregulated in prostate. Selected clones from each cDNA PCR Select library were sequenced and are depicted as SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25.

Example 2 Semi-quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (SQ-PCR)

[0166] SQ-PCR is a method that utilizes end point PCR on serial dilutions of cDNA samples in order to determine relative expression patterns of genes of interest in multiple samples. Using random hexamer primed Reverse Transcription (RT), cDNA panels are created from total RNA samples. Gene specific primers are then used to amplify fragments using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology from four 10× serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value. This is determined by analysis of the sample reactions on a 2-4% agarose gel. The tissue samples used include 12 normal, 12 cancer and 6 pairs of tissue specific cancer and matching samples. SEQ ID NO: Clone ID  4 proc00000333 sqpro023 11 proc00000299 sqpro030 19 proc00000271 sqpro038 25 proc00000244 sqpro045

SEQ ID NO: 4; Clone ID proc00000333 (Sqpro023)

[0167] Semi quantitative PCR was done using the following primers: Sqpro023forward: 5′ -TCCCTAATTTTTTCTGTCTCCAACT-3′ (SEQ ID NO:26) Sqpro023reverse: 5′ -TGTGCTGTGATTAGAGGTAGT-3′ (SEQ ID NO:27)

[0168] Table 1 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro023 in 12 normal samples from 12 different tissues. These RNA samples are individual samples or are commercially available pools, originated by pooling samples of a particular tissue from different individuals. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10x serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value. TABLE 1 Sqpro023 in Normal Tissues Tissue Normal Breast 0 Colon 1000 Endometrium 0 Kidney 100 Liver 100 Lung 1000 Ovary 1000 Prostate 100 Small Intestine 1000 Stomach 1000 Testis 100 Uterus 100

[0169] Relative levels of expression in Table 1 show that most normal tissues including prostate, express sqpro023.

[0170] Table 2 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro023 in 12 cancer samples from 12 different tissues. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10× serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value TABLE 2 Sqpro023 in Cancer Tissues Tissue Cancer Bladder 10 Breast 0 Colon 100 Kidney 10 Liver 10 Lung 10 Ovary 10 Pancreas 0 Prostate 100 Stomach 10 Testes 1000 Uterus 100

[0171] Relative levels of expression in Table 2 show that sqpro023 is expressed at very low levels in most cancers but is highly expressed in testicular, prostatic, uterine, and colon carcinomas.

[0172] Table 3 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro023 in 6 prostate cancer matching samples. A matching pair is formed by mRNA from the cancer sample for a particular tissue and mRNA from the normal adjacent sample for that same tissue from the same individual.

[0173] Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10× serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value TABLE 3 Sqpro023 in Prostate Cancer Tissues Sample ID Tissue Cancer NAT 845B/845B Prostate 10 100 916B/917B Prostate 1000 1000 1105B/1106B Prostate 100 100 902B/903B Prostate 1 10 1222B/1223B Prostate 100 10 1291B/1292B Prostate 1000 100

[0174] Relative levels of expression in Table 3 shows that sqpro023 is expressed at moderate levels in two, and at higher levels in two of the total six prostate cancer samples with some expression in the matching normal adjacent tissue (NAT).

SEQ ID NO: 11; Clone ID proc00000299 (Sqpro030)

[0175] Semi quantitative PCR was done using the following primers:

[0176] Sqpro030 forward:

[0177] 5′-TCTTCTTACAGTGCCACCTCAG-3′ (SEQ ID NO:28)

[0178] Sqpro030 reverse:

[0179] 5′-TTTCAGGGCATCATCACCATAT-3′ (SEQ ID NO:29)

[0180] Table 4 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro030 in 12 normal samples from 12 different tissues. These RNA samples are individual samples or are commercially available pools, originated by pooling samples of a particular tissue from different individuals. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value. TABLE 4 Sqpro030 in Normal Tissues Tissue Normal Breast 0 Colon 0 Endometrium 0 Kidney 100 Liver 0 Lung 1000 Ovary 0 Prostate 1 Small Intestine 10 Stomach 100 Testis 100 Uterus 0

[0181] Relative levels of expression in Table 4 show that normal lung shows high expression, and kidney, stomach, & testis exhibit moderate expression of sqpro030. However, prostate normal tissue exhibits very little expression.

[0182] Table 5 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro030 in 12 cancer samples from 12 different tissues. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value TABLE 5 Sqpro030 in Cancer Tissues Tissue Cancer Bladder 0 Breast 10 Colon 0 Kidney 100 Liver 1000 Lung 10 Ovary 100 Pancreas 1000 Prostate 100 Stomach 0 Testes 0 Uterus 0

[0183] Relative levels of expression in Table 5 show that sqpro030 is expressed highly in liver and pancreatic carcinoma, moderately expressed in prostate, kidney, and ovarian carcinomas, and expressed at very low levels in breast and lung carcinomas.

[0184] Table 6 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro030 in 6 prostate cancer matching samples. A matching pair is formed by MRNA from the cancer sample for a particular tissue and mRNA from the normal adjacent sample for that same tissue from the same individual.

[0185] Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value. TABLE 6 Sqpro030 in Prostate Cancer Tissues Sample ID Tissue Cancer NAT 845B/845B Prostate 1 0 916B/917B Prostate 0 10 1105B/1106B Prostate 0 1000 902B/903B Prostate 0 10 1222B/1223B Prostate 10 0 1291B/1292B Prostate 0 0

[0186] Relative levels of expression in Table 6 show that sqpro030 is expressed in moderate levels in two of the six prostate cancer samples. However good expression is also noticed for some matching normal adjacent tissue (NAT).

SEQ ID NO:19; Clone ID proc00000271 (Sqpro038)

[0187] Semi quantitative PCR was done using the following primers:

[0188] Sqpro038 forward:

[0189] 5′-TTGGTGAATAGCTGAAAAACA-3′ (SEQ ID NO:30)

[0190] Sqpro038 reverse:

[0191] 5′-TTCAACAGGAGGCATAAAAACTA-3′ (SEQ ID NO:31)

[0192] Table 7 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro038 in 12 normal samples from 12 different tissues. These RNA samples are individual samples or are commercially available pools, originated by pooling samples of a particular tissue from different individuals. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value. TABLE 7 Sqpro038 in Normal Tissues Tissue Normal Breast 100 Colon 100 Endometrium 10 Kidney 10 Liver 10 Lung 10 Ovary 100 Prostate 100 Small 10 Stomach 100 Testis 100 Uterus 100

[0193] Relative levels of expression in Table 7 show that almost all tissues tested show low to moderate expression of sqpro038. Moderate expression was seen in normal breast, colon, ovary, prostate, stomach, testis, and uterus.

[0194] Table 8 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro038 in 12 cancer samples from 12 different tissues. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value TABLE 8 Sqpro038 in Cancer Tissues Tissue Cancer Bladder 100 Breast 100 Colon 100 Kidney 10 Liver 1000 Lung 1000 Ovary 100 Pancreas 100 Prostate 100 Stomach 100 Testes 100 Uterus 100

[0195] Relative levels of expression in Table 8 show that sqpro038 is expressed in low levels in kidney, moderate levels in most tissues tested including prostate, and high levels in liver and lung carcinomas.

[0196] Table 9 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro038 in 6 prostate cancer matching samples. A matching pair is formed by MRNA from the cancer sample for a particular tissue and mRNA from the normal adjacent sample for that same tissue from the same individual. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value TABLE 9 Sqpro038 in Prostate Cancer Tissues Sample ID Tissue Cancer NAT 845B/845B Prostate 10 1 916B/917B Prostate 1 10 1105B/1106B Prostate 10 1 902B/903B Prostate 100 10 1222B/1223B Prostate 10 1 1291B/1292B Prostate 10 1

[0197] Relative levels of expression in Table 9 show that sqpro038 is expressed in moderate to low levels in five of the six colon cancer samples. The levels of expression were however lower in the matching normal adjacent tissue (NAT).

SEQ ID NO:25; Clone ID proc00000244 (Sqpro045)

[0198] Semi quantitative PCR was done using the following primers:

[0199] Sqpro045 forward:

[0200] 5′-GGCAAACCCTCAGAAAACAG-3′ (SEQ ID NO:32)

[0201] Sqpro045 reverse:

[0202] 5′-GCGGTAAACATAAGAGGACTGC-3′ (SEQ ID NO:33)

[0203] Table 10 shows the absolute numbers are relative levels of expression of sqpro045 in 12 normal samples from 12 different tissues. These RNA samples are individual samples or are commercially available pools, originated by pooling samples of a particular tissue from different individuals. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value. TABLE 10 Sqpro045 in Normal Tissues Tissue Normal Breast 0 Colon 0 Endometrium 10 Kidney 0 Liver 0 Lung 0 Ovary 0 Prostate 10 Small Intestine 0 Stomach 10 Testis 10 Uterus 10

[0204] Relative levels of expression in Table 10 show that only endometrium, prostate, stomach, testis, and uterus some low level of expression for sqpro045. All other tissues did not exhibit any expression for sqpro045.

[0205] Table 11 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro045 in 12 cancer samples from 12 different tissues. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10×serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value TABLE 11 Sqpro045 in Cancer Tissues Tissue Cancer Bladder 10 Breast 10 Colon 10 Kidney 0 Liver 10 Lung 10 Ovary 0 Pancreas 10 Prostate 1000 Stomach 10 Testes 100 Uterus 10

[0206] Relative levels of expression in Table 11 show that sqpro045 is expressed very highly in normal prostate. Moderate level of expression was seen in the normal testes, and low levels in normal bladder, breast, colon, liver, lung, pancreas, stomach, and uterus. No expression was observed in normal kidney, and ovary.

[0207] Table 12 shows the absolute numbers which are relative levels of expression of sqpro045 in 6 prostate cancer matching samples. A matching pair is formed by mRNA from the cancer sample for a particular tissue and mRNA from the normal adjacent sample for that same tissue from the same individual. Using Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) technology expression levels were analyzed from four 10× serial cDNA dilutions in duplicate. Relative expression levels of 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 are used to evaluate gene expression. A positive reaction in the most dilute sample indicates the highest relative expression value TABLE 12 Sqpro045 in Prostate Cancer Tissues Sample ID Tissue Cancer NAT B45B/845B Prostate 10 1 916B/917B Prostate 100 10 1105B/1106B Prostate 100 10 902B/903B Prostate 100 10 1222B/1223B Prostate 10 10 1291B/1292B Prostate 10 1

[0208] Relative levels of expression in Table 12 show that sqpro045 is expressed in low levels in three and moderate levels in the other three of the six prostate cancer samples with very little expression in the matching normal adjacent tissue (NAT)

0 SEQUENCE LISTING <160> NUMBER OF SEQ ID NOS: 33 <210> SEQ ID NO 1 <211> LENGTH: 872 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 1 acacaaacat tttattgttt attaaaattt acatttttat acattatcct ctgatcccta 60 cctctgccca atgaaaatct caaaacaatc ctggccaatg gaattggcaa attgggaatt 120 acattaaact ttgccttgtg aagttgtggc agactctcca gactttattg gatacaacac 180 ctaaagtctc ttttttaaag ttcacgaata tgagtactct gtcgaagtct ctttttgtat 240 atcccggtga gtgttaatca attttcccct tactcaaaaa ttctccttag atttagtgtc 300 ttagggtatt ttacgttgtc gaacaagcta gctaatcccc tttatatttt ctagattatt 360 ggcgctatta aggttatttg ggtatcattt aatcttggtc agactacact tggtcccaat 420 gtttcgctat atattagaga ctctctgaat cactcttaat agagaactcc cggggtttcc 480 tatccacccg ttgggaaaga gaaattgtcc ttactaaatt tttgctaact tttgcattaa 540 ctaaagactt ccacccctgg gtcacaatgt atacacaggg cacctccctg cccttttacc 600 tgagacactc gcaaatctct aacagccttt ccaccaccca aaaaaatttt agtccctctt 660 tctgcccttc aagctagact ttttttcgga cccctccttc ttcctccaaa accttttttt 720 tctttttttc tggacttggc tacacgaatt cttatcacga ctacgtcttt tgagatctga 780 ctcttgatat ataacttgtt ttattttttc tttttcactt tcgttgatac attcagctta 840 tttgatttct gtaatatgta agccattctt gt 872 <210> SEQ ID NO 2 <211> LENGTH: 616 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 2 tgccaaaatc ccagagactc ttaaagggga ctcttttttc tttttaaaga atgccatctt 60 aaatgcagta aagaagtgtt gagccctgtg aggcttctct gacagatgga cgggcaacgt 120 gacggcacca gcacagaatg gtggaacaca tgtgtcacac gcatatgcac agctgtagaa 180 acgtctccaa cacttctact gaactgttat ttctcacacc tacttgtact gactcaatca 240 cactggagtc tagtgcacac cgctaatcaa gtcctgttgg acaccacatc tcttagtctt 300 ctctacgtgc agtctttaca aaagtgtata gagtcattct gtatggcgat cactggtaac 360 gtgcgtgtgc cacaatttct tttctccttc gtcatggaac acagtgcact catatctagc 420 accaatgtta ctgtgttagt tctcgtggaa tccgcacatt tgttcatgct taagctaagt 480 ttcgtacact cagctaggca ccctgatgca cgcccacaac gtcaactgaa gagttgcctt 540 cttgttggaa aacttttgcc aactaccagt tctgtatata aaggtccact ttttgaacgc 600 ctataatacc ttaggt 616 <210> SEQ ID NO 3 <211> LENGTH: 650 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 3 acgtccgcac ggcaagtact taacactttt gcccagatca cgtcgcctac atcagattca 60 aatgtatttc taacctcaac caaagtgcaa gggaggctag aaaatagttt ttaagtggaa 120 cagtcatgga tctggctaag attcagaggc tatgttatta aacgaagaag tgaagatcag 180 ctgctgtagg ggataaccct gcgtctattt gcccactggt gacacaaatc acagtaaaaa 240 gaccttgtgt agaattctgc cttgataagg cttatagctc tttgaatgtg agccattttg 300 tatccacatt aaaaatttta cagattttct atgcctttta agaacacaag ggatctagtg 360 gcttattggt gtttacaata tgaacatttg ccggggaaca ttgtttaaca aagaagctaa 420 acacttaatg gatgatgatg ccaatctatg ctccagttcc cacttaggtt gtccacataa 480 aaaagtgtaa aatgcgatgc acaagagagt cccaggaagc acaccaagct tgatgcccct 540 gcagcatagg acataaggtt tttaattgga tttagtcctt tttggatcca gcaattcaag 600 caaattcact tgaatatgga atagattgat ttctgtacct cgcccgcgaa 650 <210> SEQ ID NO 4 <211> LENGTH: 465 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <220> FEATURE: <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (324) <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (459)..(462) <400> SEQUENCE: 4 acatgcatgt gcagcattat ttacaatagc tgaaaaacgt aagccaatcc caaatgttac 60 aaaagactgg gtggcttata aatagtagaa atgtatttct cacatgttct gtgaggatgg 120 aaatcttgag accatgggtg ccatgcatga tcagtgttct tgcttgcaca ttgcttgtct 180 tacttggctt gtatactgcc cactgtgggt ggacaagacg gaacaagagc actctcttgt 240 ggtctctttt attgaggtta ctgatcccaa tcaagggggg ttctaaccca catgaattca 300 gtccattgta cctgcccggg cggncgctcg aaattccagc acactggcgg ccgttactag 360 tggatccgag ctcggtacca agcttggcgt aatcatggtc atagctgttt cctgtgtgaa 420 attggtattc cggtcacatt ccacacacta aaaaaaaann nntcg 465 <210> SEQ ID NO 5 <211> LENGTH: 684 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 5 acaccctatt atttgctgaa ttttaattcc ccaccaattg taaaaattaa tatcatcatg 60 atctaattca ttttgtatgt tgataagaga tattgagcaa gaatgtgggg tgcgcacaca 120 cagaagagta tatgtctaca gcccgattaa agaagtgtac tcgaattctt tttgctacac 180 acaagcagtg cactacagag ttcaaggatc agcacagaag ggcaatgcac ctgtcaacag 240 gtaatactca ggttatatac ttgctgtcct ctgtaaaaca ggcaaaaaac cccccaaata 300 aagagataca acgaaaagtc tcagagtaca agtcctaata ctcagggtta cttctgacaa 360 gtatacaatt actccaaagc tcaatgcttt tccattgctg ataagaaatc agaggaacac 420 ttatattggc ttagaacaat ggtgcatcca atccagtggt gcccctgata cgagcatctc 480 caggaacctt tcatcagaga gggatatggc ctcagtaaca tcatcatatt tccctgtaat 540 ctccattcca ctctagtgtt ttgcagtctt atgcttaaag gcgttatttt ttcatgttat 600 gaaatagcac ttttctgttt atattattca tttgaaaatt aaccacctaa ggctgaagga 660 cacctccatt actaccctaa atgt 684 <210> SEQ ID NO 6 <211> LENGTH: 629 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <220> FEATURE: <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (315) <400> SEQUENCE: 6 actaaaaaag gctgaagccc actgagaaca ttacagctat gactgggctt agtggacaga 60 ccaagtgact gttaagctgt gcccaagagg tatccaaaac aaaaaaggtt agccagggac 120 atttgataag tgtttgatgt ttacacagat cacagagcaa atattactgt cacttatatt 180 acaaactgtc tttagctcat cccaaatact atcctgcttc attttttatg tgttctctat 240 tctcccttct tgtctggata tataattatt gtcataacta tatatgaaaa gaaaggaaat 300 gcacaggtca cttcntttct cattgcccca ctcctgtatt taatgctaca ccattgttgc 360 attgacagtg aacagcaaca gagacaaaat tttgaagtat ctgcctaaat tttccctcag 420 aaatatgtat tcgttttggc taaattattc agtctttaat gaacaactac tccaggcata 480 tatagccaat gtggagaaag gaattggcag aatgtggata aaatcaggcc aatatcaact 540 aaatacagat ttgatgcctg aatggaccaa taattactaa ttccgtacct cggccgcgaa 600 cacgctaagc cgaaatctgc agatatcca 629 <210> SEQ ID NO 7 <211> LENGTH: 741 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 7 accagaacta tcctttgtgc ttactgagta ttttccgaag cagtgggatt tttttctcaa 60 ctctttattc ttccccagtg catatgagga atacattaac agttccacgc gtccatcaat 120 tacaacaaag tggctatttt taagtaaatg tgtgtttcaa atatgtgttg agtttggagg 180 agagataaga gaggaatcgt aggaatctga caaacttttc caagtatatc tggctctccc 240 aatcccagga aaagtgattg ttttatactt ttttatcaac atctcaattc cagtgaaact 300 attcttggtt tccaaaatat tttgaatctt gtttctgcct caatacctag tgtatccttc 360 actcataagt tttcctaaaa cctgaattac aataacaaaa tgtatttatt tgtatcaagc 420 accattggca tttctgtgtg tctactgact ccttaaatcc tttgaggtag ccactattat 480 attccccaaa attcagatga aacaactgag gcgcagtgac ggtcacggga aggtaggttc 540 ctaagccgaa ctctctggag gagcgatagc tactccaaca tctctactta tgcaaaggct 600 aaaagctcta ttttgatcct cttgtaagaa tcccacaagc cttaaggctc aggcatctgc 660 tcctcaactc acagcattat ttcaagccac ttcttgggaa attcattgtg cacttccttg 720 ttatttctct gctatggttg t 741 <210> SEQ ID NO 8 <211> LENGTH: 607 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <220> FEATURE: <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (525) <400> SEQUENCE: 8 acttcataat taaatacatc tgtattatct ataggcacat ggtagcttat tttcaatttg 60 ataaatatat taattcttca atcagacatg ctaaagaaat taattgctct attaaatctt 120 cagtaactaa attcttcaaa cgttttgata cacgaagatt ctgaacttga attacacaag 180 gatgaaaacc tagtttaaaa taaagtatgg ggcctcacac tgagtctgtt agcactgata 240 aagaaaacca atgctaacac gattgaaaca tgttcttgcc tctgcatctt ctgaaggaat 300 taagaaggca cacctatacg ctacctaact tgacatatcc aatgatcgac aattagtagg 360 tatcatttat gagcaaagtt ctggaagaat aacaaagtga gtaacaggag tttataatca 420 gatggtagat gaaattaaag tctcttccag ttctaaggct tagttataac ttcttagtaa 480 gcctcatatg aacatgttgg cagcatttaa tgaaaatgac aggcncttgg cagcaaagtt 540 gaaattatgg aaaccctttt taaatatatt ttaccaagga aaataacaaa atgttttgac 600 aagtacc 607 <210> SEQ ID NO 9 <211> LENGTH: 677 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 9 actgtctgaa gcaagttaaa gcttcgattc ttagctcctt gtagaggaac caaggtattt 60 ttgagtttcc ccttcagtgg ttcaggacag ggactgggga gttaaaagct cctttggggg 120 tggggtgttg ggagaaagga gcacagcatt agaaaatgag aatgttaatg tatatattgg 180 atccagagtc cttattattc cataaggttc acccctccct cccccaaagg gaatattggg 240 aattctcttt taatccccgt attttttgtt gggggaaaat ttgaaggcca ctcgcctccc 300 cattagcacc ttagtgggtc accaacgccc cgtttaaccc taatgaatgt taatttaaga 360 aattgtggag aattgttgca ccaagaagga agggaattag gctccacttt aagcacccct 420 ccccaaatga gagctgttta tgtcttagcc cctgagtaaa gttggtagta aatttggaat 480 aattattaaa ttctatctgc ataaagtctg tgggaaaaca ctggagacga gccagcacga 540 ccctttttta aaaaataagc ctttttttta gagccagggc tttgggaaat tgtatgtgcc 600 attcccatca ttctgggcaa tttttttttt tttttttgag acagagtttc actcttgttg 660 cccaggctgg agtgcaa 677 <210> SEQ ID NO 10 <211> LENGTH: 803 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 10 acagtctctt attactctct taatccgtgt ggtttaatta acccagtgta tgtgcagcta 60 aagttctgtt ctctttgatt cagactgcca ggtgtttgtc ctctaacttt cccaaaaatc 120 tttctagtat gatttattgt attctctgag aatcacagta tttaagggtt cctgatagag 180 ctttatataa ttgcatgaac aacaaagttc ttctgaatag tgattcttat gaataaaggt 240 agctattttt tggaaggcca tggaaaacag gtggcaggtc tgttagatta attatttgga 300 agaaatttgt taaattgcag ttcttttttt aagaatgcat tttcctgaga gtcctatttg 360 atcagtatta taatgttgtt atactttttt tgtgtttata aatattttca ctcaaccact 420 ttaaatatgt tgtgaaacaa ggtcccaagt ataaataaat tgcgatatac ccaactcaga 480 ctctttatgt atcagacttt cattgaattt tgacaatatc tattaatttc caaagtcata 540 tttcagcctt ggggaatatc agattaattg cccactaaat gcgtagggtg cactatgatt 600 gaaaatttag tggcgaattc tgcatttatg taaagtaagc ctggaggcta cagctagaac 660 attttgttat tttaaatagg gaagaattaa ttcctaaacc aggctctcca aaatccttct 720 gttggcttct ctgctgcttt gcttaaaaat aaagtaaaaa tatggttgct ccaagtttgg 780 aaggtttcag gattttgtgg agt 803 <210> SEQ ID NO 11 <211> LENGTH: 630 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 11 acaatttcca aataactcag gaaatgcatg tcctagttat tcccaggttt attgacacat 60 ccaagctagg cctctcttta tttctcttgg ggcaacttaa ttcttaaaag tggcccaatt 120 taatttccat atttgtatta catttttatt cattttttaa atttatatgt ttaaagtgac 180 tggacaacag cttaatatgt cacctattgg caaagtaatg tgcatatcaa atgcacattg 240 tatatacaga ctgacaagtg accagaacat gtatgaaaat aggaaacctg agcagcagac 300 tctgcaacaa ccagttcaag aagccacaac atgatttagg cagtaaattg catggaccaa 360 aatggtcaag actctgctca accaactgcc agattcccta attttttctg tctccaactc 420 agaacaactc acagaatggc aaacatattt cccaaaccag tcatacaaaa tgccacattt 480 ctaattagca cacctccagc ttttctgtcc caactacctc taatcacagc acacatacag 540 tcctcctttt tttccttttt aatttttttg cctataaagc tttaccattt cctgacctgt 600 ctttcagtct ctaccaaatg caagttcctg 630 <210> SEQ ID NO 12 <211> LENGTH: 831 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 12 acactcctgc acccccagcc ttcatgattg ctttttatac attactgggt tttgtttcca 60 agtggaactt attggttaat aatggtccta aattatttta tttattaatt ttttaagcca 120 cctttctctt atagaaataa ggttcctgag gacagggagt ttattctgta tactacggta 180 tccctgacat cagggcttgt gcctgccgat agtagatgct ttctaaatat gttctgaata 240 ttagatagct agttcccaaa tgcactgcac tgaaagtgta tgaaaattgg aaattggctt 300 ctagattttt gtattatatt gccaaatgat ggagtgatga gattgaaatc tactacttct 360 ttttgccttt tttttagggg gagtagagga gggcctgcac aaacagcaga tacacacaca 420 gtaaataaga tttatttcag ccagcaagta tttattgagg tgaaaatggg ggttcaatgt 480 gactctttgt gagtgactag tttcttggag tctattaaag catcagttta aacatcaatt 540 ctctatggta tgattaatgt ttcttttttt actttataag catgaagctg ccttcaattt 600 tattgttaaa tttaagtgtt ttacattgga aaaaagtaaa ttgaattttg aaatgaggtc 660 tgtcccggtc tcactttcat ggcttcaggt tatcaaagtt ttaatttctc tttgtatgga 720 agataattat agtattcatt tttgctcctg agtaaagcca cgagtctcaa gattattttt 780 cttttttaaa aattagaatt gtcagtttat agttgtatac atttataggg t 831 <210> SEQ ID NO 13 <211> LENGTH: 601 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <220> FEATURE: <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (592) <400> SEQUENCE: 13 actttttgta aatgcatggc atatctcaaa attcaaaaga aactggtaat aataattggc 60 cccggggaag gtatacaggg tggcagggct acagggcaca ggcgttagga gggggaacta 120 atttaattta atttaattgt atatcctttg aatgctatac cttaagtatg tattaactat 180 tcaaaaaaac taaatttttt tttaaagaac atctgttctt taaagtcgta gaacattttc 240 atcactccaa gaagttcctt catgcccctt tgcaaagttg tttggctttt ccaagcctct 300 gtgaaacccc aggaattcaa ggaggccatg gagaagaatc cacttttcta tagtagcaaa 360 atatggtgag gaaagagaag tgattactcc taaaaagaac atataattgt tggttaatcc 420 aatgaccaag gagtgacagt gtaggtaagg ggcccagagc cagaacccaa ggcaagtgtg 480 tttaataaca ggaaaaaagc taaataactt tgggtgactg gccgggcggg cgctcgaaag 540 ccgaatctgc gatatccatc acacgggggg cgtcgagcat gatctagagg gncaaatcgg 600 c 601 <210> SEQ ID NO 14 <211> LENGTH: 752 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 14 acataaagga acccagtctt aaggtggtag ctctcaggaa tatgcgcttc ctcaagtctt 60 ttccaacagg aaatagaaaa catttcctac atagaaaaac attaacaaat tatgtttcat 120 tttgatggtt tcagctcatt gtcataagtc actcaaactt ttaataattt cctggcctgg 180 cttaagccag ctaggagtca tttgaaatca aaagagccca ctgtgttgca cactaatact 240 ccattcatga gaacctctcc accttgttgg gtggtttctg actcactaga agaatcctac 300 aaaattataa gtcaagtttt ctcatactga agaagattta agggccttag agtaaaggag 360 atctaaggtc catttcaagg tcaccactac taagtagcag aaagtgaaac tacagttttg 420 tctctttttc tttttttttc caacaagaaa gactgttagc caaatgcgag tggggaaaag 480 tccaagcttt aacgctgaca agtcatatgt gcgtcctcta gaatttagca gatggggagt 540 ctgtcttagg tattgctata ttgctggctt caagggtatt gtaagccttc agtaaataaa 600 gaaatactat tagacaaaag ctttatttta ggcacatcac ttttgttttt ccttctgaat 660 gttagtatcc tcaactttag tgtagagata atgactgcta actaacagat atataataac 720 taaagtagtt tatacacagt attctatata gt 752 <210> SEQ ID NO 15 <211> LENGTH: 548 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 15 acagtaagaa aaacaaatca gttttgctat cagtaacttt actaaattcg gccaggtggg 60 gtggctcact cctacagtcc agtcccagct acttggaggt tgaggtggga ggatcgcttg 120 agcccaggag ttggaggctg cagtgagcta tgacaccact gcactccagc ttggtgacag 180 agtaagaccc catttctaaa acaaacaaac aaacaaaaag cctatggaac ttacattgta 240 attgggggaa gatatactat aaacaaacaa aaaaaatatc agataatgat gacttctcca 300 aagaaaaaaa tgagcatgat gcaattaaaa atggctgggg ggtcaggcaa gccctctgta 360 agaaaagaca tttaaattga ttgacaagaa ggagccagtc atgtgaaggt ctgggggaag 420 tacctgcccg ggcgggcgct cgagccctat agtgagtcgt attagaagcc gaattccagc 480 acactggcgg gcgttactag tggatccgag ctcggtacca agcttggcgt aatcatggtc 540 atagctgt 548 <210> SEQ ID NO 16 <211> LENGTH: 628 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 16 actggggatt acatggcagg agtcaccgtg cctggtgcat aatttttaaa tagtaacgct 60 tagaagtcat atttcccatc tgaaacccat ttggagccca gcaaggccac ttaattaaaa 120 gatttagact tacctaggat catttctttc ttaattcagt atattctttt tgaatttggt 180 agccagcatt atattaggtc ctgagaacaa aaggatgaga cataattcct gccctcaaga 240 aagcattgtc ttgtagggat aacgaaccag gtcaataaat attcttctag tgccttaagg 300 attgataggg agtgctagat atagtggaac acgttagaga aaggactcaa cactggctga 360 gatagagcaa gagagagaga gcaggaagct aaatcatgaa gggccttatc gtgccatgta 420 attgattcag atgtatatct cataatatag ataaatattg aagatattta agcaaaagaa 480 tatcatctag acttgcatga tctgcatcag gctcaccacc ccgtaattaa ggaatatccc 540 ttactaacac tggagtaact ttgtgcctcg ggcggagcca gctaagccga atctggggaa 600 ttcctccaca ggggggggcg gacaggtc 628 <210> SEQ ID NO 17 <211> LENGTH: 549 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <220> FEATURE: <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (258) <400> SEQUENCE: 17 actcacctga agacacaata gactcttcct ttaaagctat gtgatgttga agtgggattt 60 gaccactgaa agaaaatcct gtgttagatc ttactcagtc taagtatttt atattcaaaa 120 taattcaaaa taagattttt ttccgtttat gacttaaaga accatattat aatgactcta 180 cagtctttta tttcttctcc caatgatctc atttcccaga ttattgggct tacagaaaat 240 tttcatcctt agaaactngg attccttttt agtccctccc ttttgtaacc ttcctgagga 300 ttctgctggc tccagctctc cagtttacac gagactgtgt atctatagct acataagtga 360 cgctagctct ttgctttcaa atttgtgagt ttgtattttt cttttaaaaa aaccaaatag 420 cagatgggag gatttccttt tttgtctttt ctaaattaat ttgaatttag cactaaaatc 480 ctattttttt agaagaattg gaagatgaaa tttaaataat ctttaatcgt attcgtaagt 540 gattttata 549 <210> SEQ ID NO 18 <211> LENGTH: 588 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 18 gtcgcggccg aggtatcagg agtgccactc tcttaaaacc ttggtcactt aagtctccca 60 tttctttaat ggcccaatat ggggatccac tcattggagg agtcacgaac ccgcttgcct 120 catcagctct ctgacagcag ttgtataggt ctctaatata gccctgatta cagcttttga 180 aatatacttg tctgtctttc ctaccagaca gtcagctccc aatggcagag actcggcata 240 aagttagcat atggtgatga tgccctgaaa acccattagc aattatatgt gtccatattg 300 cacataccct aaatattttt aatcacttgg gtattgaaca aacttatctt cttacagtgc 360 cacctcagac cgggaaacac aaagaagttc aaattcttct agttccccac cttttttttt 420 tccttttttt tctttgagac aaagtctcgc tctgtgcacc caggctgggg tacctggccg 480 ggtgagcgcg cgaaattctg cggatatcca tcacactggg gggcgggcga gcatgcgtct 540 ttgagggccg aattgggcct ataatgaggg cggtgacaaa ccactggg 588 <210> SEQ ID NO 19 <211> LENGTH: 870 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 19 cactttagct agagaatgtg ataaacatct cctcctccac tccacaggac tatccttctt 60 taaattatga ggatgaacat ttggccgaga aacggtatcc ttaatatttc cgggtatggt 120 aactaactag aaaaatgtaa tcctctattt ggattctcac aactgtagaa atcattatgt 180 cttcagaaaa ggaaggtaat tttataaacc ttcatctcaa aagaagtatt attttcatgc 240 aaatatccct aagtaatata acagcaagga agagaaagtg ggaatatggt aaatacatat 300 agtcaattgt ctggaaagaa attgtctgtg aaaagccaat aagtattttg caaattcttg 360 tttcatggca agaaagatca ggtaaatgag gcccttatac cccagacctg gcccctattt 420 ggccacctta ggaggaaatc ttgaaattaa attttgtaat ttaatataaa ttggaaaatt 480 taacttccct tatacttatc cggagcccca ctttaatttc caatgccaca ctatggcgct 540 tccatataag tgctttggat tcacgagccc cccgaggatt gcataccttt gtggaataac 600 ttagagagtt cttaggccta agggcttgcc acgtgagccg cagatcactg cccctgcaca 660 ctcccgcctc gggcgacacg agtgagactt tcgttctcca aaaaaaaaaa aaagaagaag 720 ttttaggcct taggaaaaat tccatgaagt tcagtgcttc cattctcctt gtttgtaaaa 780 tgggaataat aacagtatca ttctcataag attgtaataa aggtttaaat aaaacaataa 840 aaagcactga gaatgatgct cagctcatag 870 <210> SEQ ID NO 20 <211> LENGTH: 541 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 20 gcaggtgttg cgatgagccg aaatcccggc attggactcc aaggctgggc gacagaattg 60 gactccggtc tcaaaaaaaa agaatggaaa ggtgaaggaa gggctgagaa tttgcctctc 120 attaggcctt ccataagtaa tctggtcttc cccgtggcag gactcaccag aagctccagt 180 tcttttcccc tggggcacag actctcaagt gaccaaaatt tgccaaattc caaacattgg 240 gacagttgcc tgcccagctg ttcctaaact agtcagttta tttggaggag atattttctg 300 cattggggag ccactggaag tctcacgtct ttcaaacatg aagtcctaag atcgtaacgc 360 caacaaagag agctgtgcag atttcactga gctaagcaca aagggacctc catgtgtaga 420 gaatgggcac acctcacagg tcctctcacg tgagaaaaaa atattccaac acagtttaga 480 gttttttgtt agctatagct agactgctgt tcctccttag cttaaactat acatcatctg 540 t 541 <210> SEQ ID NO 21 <211> LENGTH: 651 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <220> FEATURE: <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (462) <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (625) <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (645)..(646) <221> NAME/KEY: unsure <222> LOCATION: (648) <400> SEQUENCE: 21 ccgagctcgg acccactagt accggccgcc agtgtcctgg aattcggctt agcgtgctcg 60 cgcccgaggt acccacaaaa actaaaaaat aatcaagttt ttctggtctt taaggaatat 120 cttgtatttt gaatagttct atctggggtt tcactggtgg acaccaaatt ttcccaaaat 180 tcaagcagct tcaggagatg tttctaaagt ttatctgagc tactgtcttg gaatctagga 240 catttctgat acagtgagtt gctacacata ctttaaatgt caagacatac tcctcaagat 300 aatacaggtt tttcatgaag tctagctaag aatactgtca cacattttta aattctacac 360 acactgtatt tatgaacaat cccagataga ttttcctgac aatttttttt cttacttttg 420 gaagttgatc tagcatttct attaagtacc tggccgggcg gncgctcgaa gccgaattct 480 gcagatatcc atcacactgg cggccgctcg agcatgcatc tagaggggcc aattcgccct 540 atagtgagtc gtattacaat tcactgggcg gcgtttacaa cgtcgtgatg ggagaacctg 600 gcgttaccaa cttaatcgct ggtcnctttt caaaaaaaaa aaagnntnta a 651 <210> SEQ ID NO 22 <211> LENGTH: 919 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 22 acttagcaca gggtcttgaa tataataggt aattatgatg gaaagatcct tggagcgaga 60 taagttcaaa gaggaacttg tgagatatga gagcgagtat agaacagcag aggacttgag 120 ttctcacaga agtcttggag catgaatggg atctgagatt ttgcctaatt gcctttttat 180 ttgcagatat ccaaaccaag gccctgggaa caaatggaaa gctttaaggt tcatggctgg 240 gggaataatt ttttgaaata aaaatgttaa agcttgctat tcatatgcct tgcggctctc 300 cttgacttga aggtgccaag gaactgagat agagctaaaa gtttagctat ttttcagcat 360 gagagcttgt cttagaagca atcctgatga gtcagaagga taacacagat gaactcccct 420 gtttgcccaa gatcctcatg gtcatcattt gcctgctttc ttcctggaca tgaacaactg 480 tgttcgacaa tagatcatac ttgcggaagg aatagatttc tccaatggct ttgagcttta 540 aatgctccta gaagagtagt taacacacca ctcaatccca ctggagttcc ccagccttgt 600 ggttatgtag tctatataag tggttttaaa agtgaagctg agattgggtg aggttgtggg 660 ccaattccca ttcatcttct agtggacaga attataggaa gaagaatggg tatagctttt 720 tctttccacc aaggaccaaa tgggaggaaa tagtcttaat ttaacagaaa agaaattgat 780 gccaaaaagg ctgtgcaaca ggtctgagag ggcaggggaa ttgagtaatc aagggaggcc 840 aaggcatacc ctgatttctc tgaagctgtt tgagatcagg aagggagctg tgttgtttga 900 ctgggcctgg ggtgagtgt 919 <210> SEQ ID NO 23 <211> LENGTH: 1083 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 23 accatgttga atcaaaagtg gtgagaacag acatacttgt tcttgttcca cttcttagct 60 ctcgattcca tgggctttca aaataattat acagaatttc ttgattcagt ggtttccaaa 120 tgtggctgca catcaaaatc acttgggaag cttatataaa ataacaatac taagcccctt 180 cccagaccac atcaatcagg atctcagagg atagggccta cgctttgata tttttggttt 240 taaggcattt caactgattc taatatgcag ccaggattga acactgtttc aatttctgag 300 ctattttctg gtagcatctt aggcctttga agaactgtat taaccctttc aagccctcat 360 gattgcgata tgtcaaagca ggattaataa ctgatacatc agattttaaa aacagagaaa 420 taaatatatc tgtgaacaag ggtactagaa agggcagtct gtttgtttga gaagaataca 480 ataatcaagt tggatggtga aaccactcta acaataaaaa ttattatgac atatctgtct 540 tgaaagtaat ttcttccgaa aacatcactc atcattttcg ttcccttgat atcgtctgat 600 ccggatcaca gggctcagtt tctttcccta agtaacagta acaatctata ttttattttc 660 atttaataat aggaaaagag gacaatatgt ttggaaatta tcactctctg tatcaagctc 720 tccctgttgg ctcatgggtt gaagtattaa agccttcata agcttgaata tcctctgttt 780 gtagttactt ctacttcagg gagattttat ggaacgtaat caagccaaaa ctgtcagaag 840 ctcctcacaa gaattgtttt cagcagggac ttttggtata acaaacagtc tgaaaattag 900 actgacttta atcagtataa tctaaaatca attataccca acagcattga accacactct 960 ctcaaatttt gttggcttgt gaactgagaa ttcttgcaaa gtagatgcct ctctaaagtg 1020 ggactttgag taggcagcaa agacccttct tgctaaggat tcccagttct tgtgggcaat 1080 ggt 1083 <210> SEQ ID NO 24 <211> LENGTH: 539 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 24 acaaatatta atgtctgatt atggggttct accccacatt ccaccatggt atgatgttat 60 attgttaaag tattgtggat ctcaaattga ttctttttgg cccttcaatt tgtgaataca 120 tacacacaaa attgcagtta aatagttgtt tctattttaa aagcaccacc aaagatggct 180 tgttaaagat ggataccgtg aagcaacctg ctggggtccc cttccacgct gtggaatctt 240 tgttcttttg ctcttcacaa taaaccttgc taccgctcca aaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaa 300 ggggggtctc cccatatttc tttgtgacag ctcagtagtg cccattccaa ttcttttatt 360 ccttatttta aaactccaat ttacttttat taccttcttc caaaaggttt accctttatc 420 tcctattccc cgtgggtcgg gtttcccggg aaaaaatgcc caagaggatg gggttctcca 480 acgatggttt aacttcccag ggcgaggttt atttggaacc cagtttgtgg gggccccaa 539 <210> SEQ ID NO 25 <211> LENGTH: 981 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Homo sapiens <400> SEQUENCE: 25 acctctggta gaattcagct gtaaatccat ctggtcctgg gctttttttg gttggtaggc 60 tatttattaa ggcctcaatt tcttatcaca aatgtgtgaa tttgatcctg tcatcatgat 120 gctagctggt tattcagagc caataggagc aaccatggcc caggtaacac agtgtcaaga 180 ggttcctgag aaagtgcacg catggcagtc agagtatagt ttggtttcat atattttagg 240 aaggcaagag ttatgggtaa acacactggt ttcgctccaa aaggtggggt atcttgaaag 300 gggagaaata atgagaaagg agatttagtt taaataacca cttactcata ttcttgctga 360 aagataaatt attctgaaat tttctcttaa ttgcactcat ctgtaaacat attttggcat 420 attaaactag caaattctta aacatgttta tttactaaat tgaatagcaa caatttttcc 480 cctttaaaaa cataaatact atttcgttat atgagttatt ttttctcatg ctctcggctc 540 caggttgagt ttcttaaatt ttgaaacact atgttgtttc aaatccctgt tttatttctt 600 cctgaaacac atgcctacct tcttcaataa gctcagtcac attgatcatt gagctctcta 660 acatcattta cactaggaat ttctcaagct ggctgtttgg actggttagc tcccatatta 720 tatgtaacta tcttcactct tgcaattatt tcaagttttg ttttcccacc aaactgaaag 780 cctcataagg gcaggatcaa gacgtttttg ttattgttgt cttttattca aaactgtctt 840 tgtttttttg attgtatgat taggatcatt ttatgctttg acttccattg gttggcctct 900 attattgatt aacaatcaat gattagctaa gaatttaaat taaacaataa attccccaaa 960 ttcttgcttc accatgcttg t 981 <210> SEQ ID NO 26 <211> LENGTH: 25 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 26 tccctaattt tttctgtctc caact 25 <210> SEQ ID NO 27 <211> LENGTH: 21 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 27 tgtgctgtga ttagaggtag t 21 <210> SEQ ID NO 28 <211> LENGTH: 22 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 28 tcttcttaca gtgccacctc ag 22 <210> SEQ ID NO 29 <211> LENGTH: 22 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 29 tttcagggca tcatcaccat at 22 <210> SEQ ID NO 30 <211> LENGTH: 21 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 30 ttggtgaata gctgaaaaac a 21 <210> SEQ ID NO 31 <211> LENGTH: 23 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 31 ttcaacagga ggcataaaaa cta 23 <210> SEQ ID NO 32 <211> LENGTH: 20 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 32 ggcaaaccct cagaaaacag 20 <210> SEQ ID NO 33 <211> LENGTH: 22 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Artificial Sequence <220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic <400> SEQUENCE: 33 gcggtaaaca taagaggact gc 22 

What is claimed is:
 1. An isolated polynucleotide comprising: (a) SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25; (b) a fragment of at least 15 contiguous nucleobases of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25; (c) a nucleic acid sequence which, due to degeneracy in genetic coding, comprises variations in nucleotide sequence as compared to SEQ ID NO:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24 or 25, but which still encodes the same protein; or (d) a nucleic acid sequence which hybridizes under stringent conditions to an antisense sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 or
 25. 2. An antisense oligonucleotide which hybridizes to a polynucleotide of claim
 1. 3. A vector comprising the polynucleotide of claim
 1. 4. A host cell expressing the vector of claim
 3. 5. A method for producing a PSG polypeptide comprising culturing the host cell of claim 4 under conditions which promote expression of the polynucleotide and isolating polypeptide expressed in the cells.
 6. A method for producing a cell expressing a PSG polypeptide comprising transforming or transfecting a cell with the vector of claim 3 so that the cell, under appropriate culture conditions, expresses a PSG polypeptide.
 7. A polypeptide encoded by the polynucleotide of claim
 1. 8. An antibody which is immunospecific for the polypeptide of claim
 7. 9. A PSG for diagnosing prostate cancer comprising a polynucleotide of claim 1 or a polypeptide encoded thereby.
 10. A method for diagnosing the presence of prostate cancer in a patient comprising: (a) determining levels of a PSG of claim 9 in cells, tissues or bodily fluids in a patient; and (b) comparing the determined levels of PSG with levels of a PSG of claim 9 in cells, a PSG tissues or bodily fluids from a normal human control, wherein a change in determined levels of PSG in said patient versus normal human control is associated with the presence of prostate cancer.
 11. A method of diagnosing metastases of prostate cancer in a patient comprising: (a) identifying a patient having prostate cancer that is not known to have metastasized; (b) determining levels of a PSG of claim 9 in a sample of cells, tissues, or bodily fluid from said patient; and (c) comparing the determined PSG levels with levels of a PSG of claim 9 in cells, tissue, or bodily fluid of a normal human control, wherein an increase in determined PSG levels in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which has metastasized.
 12. A method of staging prostate cancer in a patient having prostate cancer comprising: (a) identifying a patient having prostate cancer; (b) determining levels of a PSG of claim 9 in a sample of cells, tissue, or bodily fluid from said patient; and (c) comparing determined PSG levels with levels of a PSG of claim 9 in cells, tissues, or bodily fluid of a normal human control, wherein an increase in determined PSG levels in said patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which is progressing and a decrease in the determined PSG levels is associated with a cancer which is regressing or in remission.
 13. A method of monitoring prostate cancer in a patient for the onset of metastasis comprising: (a) identifying a patient having prostate cancer that is not known to have metastasized; (b) periodically determining levels of a PSG of claim 9 in samples of cells, tissues, or bodily fluid from said patient; and (c) comparing the periodically determined PSG levels with levels of a PSG of claim 9 in cells, tissues, or bodily fluid of a normal human control, wherein an increase in any one of the periodically determined PSG levels in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which has metastasized.
 14. A method of monitoring a change in stage of prostate cancer in a patient comprising: (a) identifying a patient having prostate cancer; (b) periodically determining levels of a PSG of claim 9 in cells, tissues, or bodily fluid from said patient; and (c) comparing the periodically determined PSG levels with levels of a PSG of claim 9 in cells, tissues, or bodily fluid of a normal human control, wherein an increase in any one of the periodically determined PSG levels in the patient versus the normal human control is associated with a cancer which is progressing in stage and a decrease is associated with a cancer which is regressing in stage or in remission.
 15. A method of identifying potential therapeutic agents for use in imaging and treating prostate cancer comprising screening molecules for an ability to bind to a PSG of claim 9 wherein the ability of a molecule to bind to PSG is indicative of the molecule being useful in imaging and treating prostate cancer.
 16. A method of imaging prostate cancer in a patient comprising administering to the patient the antibody of claim
 8. 17. The method of claim 16 wherein said antibody is labeled with paramagnetic ions or a radioisotope.
 18. A method of treating prostate cancer in a patient comprising administering to the patient the antibody of claim
 8. (a) contacting cells which express the PSG polypeptide of claim 7 or cell membranes expressing the PSG polypeptide of claim 7 with a candidate compound; and (b) monitoring the cells for changes in PSG polypeptide activities or binding as compared to cells or cell membranes not contacted with the candidate compound.
 21. A PSG polypeptide agonist identified by the method of claim
 20. 22. A PSG polypeptide antagonist identified by the method of claim
 20. 23. A vaccine comprising a PSG polypeptide or a vector expressing a PSG polypeptide which induces an immune response against the PSG polypeptide in a mammal.
 24. A method of inducing an immune response against a PSG polypeptide in a mammal which comprises administering to the mammal the vaccine of claim
 23. 25. A method of treating prostate cancer in a patient comprising administering to the patient the vaccine of claim
 23. 